I thought his post about shooting people was pretty good too, however it ignores one crucial aspect of the "black box" era - specifically, that people are being conditioned to accept data from such recorders as ironclad evidence of guilt.
For the most part, they are right. 99. 9999% of the time, if the black box says that Gary was doing donuts in the parking lot before the air bag fired, it will be correct. Pulling the last few seconds of parametric data before an accident is quite reasonable to determine what happened, however even that apparently ironclad evidence is incomplete. For example, it tells the police or insurance investigator what the CAR was doing, but not who was driving it. This can be quite important to your pocketbook should your car be involved in unlawful activity. Suppose you send your son down the street to buy eggs and he drag races on the way home but doesn't get caught, the insurance man might see that data some day down the road and decide to jack YOUR insurance rates on the spot. The dealer might decide to void your warranty.
The problem of "who was driving" has already been addressed by some systems used with commercial vehicles, they take video of the interior and store the last X seconds for correlation with the black box data. Private sector black boxes will inevitably take the same approach, to ensure that the assignment of Sacramental Liability is correct and complete.
As the boxes get more and more sophisticated, at some points the cops will be able to query your car and see whether you have been exceeding the speed limit over the last X months, and assign fines accordingly. For a guy like me, this poses no risk, but many of the TDR members would not get off so easily (some of you may recall my poll on speeding from a few months back, which showed that less than 12% of the TDR respondees obey the speed limits).
The question over who the data belongs to, is a valid one. Are you entitled to even SEE the data that the dealer pulls out of your truck? If they void your warranty, do they have to show you? If they DO show you, how do YOU know it is real or that it even came from your car? "Hmmm, this truck was driven at 80 mph for a few seconds, must have been passing somebody. If it was 85 mph I could void the warranty... and this particular owner is a real pain in the butt. Hmmmm... a poke here, a peek there... PRESTO! Boss, this guy's warranty needs to be voided!" Bluster, argue, moan, protest - tough luck, it's right there in black and white.
On a final note, from that previous post:
I don't like the idea of this either:
It seems to me that if I want to have a plesant drive at varying speeds up to 90 MPH with heavy accelerations/decelerations or make competent use of a firearm,killing only my enemies or other threatening and nusiance people NO one should be watching or recording what I do. What I do is My business.
Read that paragraph again, and think about the difference in having Citizen X observe your behavior by CHANCE, versus being under surveillance all the time. Before the fall of the Iron Curtain, constant monitoring of the people was something we associated with Communist and dictatorial regimes - the very idea brought up images of the KGB and Stasi. The average American would have LAUGHED at the idea of American citizens being subjected to such monitoring. We are after all CITIZENS, not SUBJECTS. And yet less than 2 decades after the fall of the Iron Curtain, it is the "free" Western societies who have VOLUNTARILY accepted the yoke of round-the-clock surveillance of the people via cameras, eavesdropping, black boxes, wire-taps, you name it. Would you be comfortable having a police officer follow you around 24/7 just to make sure you don't break the law? Well, that's what you are getting courtesy of the expansion of surveillance and monitoring - whether you like it or not.
In the United Kingdom, the people are monitored by more than a million video cameras with automatic facial recognition and tracking capabilities. Here in the USA, we have similar systems deployed in some cities, and even at sporting events. Also here at home, in the wake of 9/11 our leaders have implemented the Dept. of Homeland Security, the Patriot Act, etc to "protect" us from outside evils - "I'm sorry we have to listen to your phone calls Mr. TDR, or force you to drink your own breast milk Mrs. TDR, but the only way we can catch foreign terrorists entering our country is to really keep track of all of the folks that live here. We can't track people who VISIT here because that might hurt their feelings. Here, have a napkin... . "
If you are in favor of such controls because they might save you MONEY or make you feel a little safer, fine and dandy. But don't dismiss as crackpots those of us who have legitimate concerns about privacy and governmental oversight. Remember, this is America... or at least it used to be.