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For all the good it does, technology often fails us in big ways (Propsed Mandatory GPS in Cars)
ZDNet ^ | December 6, 2005 | David Berlind

Posted on 12/06/2005 10:24:10 PM PST by nickcarraway

Technology has improved our world in so many ways. When they work, traffic lights and pedestrian crossings with audible cues for those with visual impairments are but one example of the many simple successes of societal automation. But attempts to underpin society with technology have failed too.

Earlier today, I was horrified to learn that the Feds have considered manadating the inclusion of Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking devices in our cars. As I explain in that blog, I was even more horrified to learn about how the Feds have discussed how, if the devices fall out of touch with the GPS network, that our cars can automatically be disabled. Not only does my own personal account with "state-controlled" vehicle-mounted wireless technology set the precedent for why such Big Brotheresque police-state like technology can never work, it's a sad example of how we as a people have completely failed to leverage existing technology in such a way that makes society more efficient. As a side note, another example of that failure is how thousands upon thousands of good samaritans offered space in their homes to victims of Katrina using Craigs' List and how most of those victims never saw those listings. This is not only a failing of technology, but a failing of the technology community to rise to the occasion of what was really a national disaster. I digress.

Around four years ago (an estimate), my wife and acquired two FastLane electronic toll transponders. Such transponders are designed to ease the congestion at roadway toll booths by letting cars drive through them without stopping to drop a toll in a bucket or exchange monies with a human toll collector. It's a wireless technology. In some states in the northeastern US, the system is referred to as EZPass. FastLane transponders work where EZPass transponders are taken and vice versa. In Massachusetts where I live, if you have a transponder that's compatible with the FastLane system, then, as you approach the toll booth, you pick one of the FastLane Only lanes and theoretically, things should work swimmingly as you drive through the toll plaza. Unfortunately, sometimes they don't and the results can be frustrating as well as a waste of time and money (yours and the taxpayers).

In the FastLane system, each transponder is connected to an account which must be preloaded with enough funds to cover your driving habits on New England's tolled roadways. For the sake of convenience, we have our transponders tied to a credit card. When, by way of transponder usage, one of our preloaded accounts dips below a certain threshold, a transaction with our credit card is triggered to repopulate the account with more funds. Although it's not enforced (it could easily be), when the transponders are purchased, they must also be assigned to a specific vehicle. When my wife and I acquired our transponders, we had to provide the license plate number and other descriptive data such as the year, manufacturer, and model names of our cars.

The "system" involves very little feedback to end-users. When you attempt to drive through a FastLane-only lane tolls, a green light indicates that everything's fine: that your transponder has been detected and your account has been docked whatever the toll amount is. In Massachusetts, at least at the toll booths I frequent, a yellow light indicates that your preloaded account is low on funds. My wife and I ignore these warnings because we know our accounts are set up to automatically reload from our credit card. The last bit of feedback we get is on our credit card statement. Every month or so, we'll see a line item indicating that we've been charged to fund our FastLane accounts.

The transponder itself is a small white brick. It has no buttons or indicator lights. Here's where the problem begins. The only way to tell if the transponder is working is to try to go through a toll booth. If you get a green or yellow light, no problem. But there are no big signs or instructions telling you what to do if you get no light. Is the transponder malfunctioning? Is the toll booth malfuctioning? Should I stay or should I go? There's no way to figure this out. Earlier this year, as I pulled into the FastLane-only lane on Massachusetts' famous Tobin Bridge (just outside of Boston), nothing happened.

Fearful of getting a traffic ticket for some ridiculous amount of money, I stopped and waited. I knew the blare of horn honking going on behind me (other FastLane holders have no patience for a stopped car in the FastLane, nor should they) would attract some attention. Eventually, a toll booth guy walks up to my car and noticed me waving my transponder and says, "Oh, it must be dead. You still have to pay." As I pulled $3.00 out of my pocket, he hands me a piece of paper with instructions on how to get a new transponder. As I a pull away though, the red light blinks and a buzzer goes off. This usually indicates that someone just ran the toll. I've seen this happen many times before, where the toll collector just waves you through despite the red light blinking and the buzzer going off. Little did I know how this would trigger a process that no honest citizen should be forced to go through.

I never gave that day another thought until one day, I got a $100 summons in the mail for running the toll booth. It was signed by a Massachusetts state trooper. There were no troopers in sight when I "ran" the toll so my guess is that when the red light blinked and the buzzer went off, a camera probably took a picture of the license plate on the back of my car. The resulting photograph was probably examined by a trooper who then rather matter of factly wrote up a summons. Apparently, the camera angle didn't include the toll booth guy with my $3.00 toll in his hand.

The time wasted so far includes the time of the people I held up in the FastLane lane, the time of the guy who had to walk up to my car, and the time of all the people involved (including the state trooper) in making sure the $100 summons made its way to my mailbox. Some of that time translates into taxpayer money. Now, even though I consider my time to be worth more than $100 per hour, exoneration from the charges is a matter of principle (and an opportunity to write about a complete but avoidable breakdown in technology). The summons gave me the choice of admitting guilt and paying the fine by mail or going to court. It would have been nice if there was a telephone or Web-based appeals process (opportunities for technology). But, sadly there isn't. To appeal the ticket, I would have to appear in court. Processing my request for appeal involved more time and taxpayer money. Especially since I was due to be in San Francisco on the original court date.

Eventually, I showed up for my court appearance. It took me an hour to get to the courthouse in Chelsea. I had to cross the Tobin Bridge. This time, I paid a toll collector and asked for a receipt. I wished I asked the guy who took my $3.00 on that fateful day for a receipt. But all he gave me was a piece of paper with the instructions on what to do about malfunctioning transponders. Fortunately, I saved it and had it with me in hopes that I could prove I wasn't a lawbreaker and that I did the right thing that day.

After sitting around for about 30 minutes, my name was called and a bailiff ushered me into a courtroom that was the size of a large walk-in closet. Packed against one side was the Judge's bench, the Judge, and a state trooper (but not the one that signed my summons). The Judge read the charges to me and then asked the trooper for a copy of the citation. The trooper said "The state has no citation to offer at this time." The Judge looked at me and said "The charges are dismissed. You may go." All that for nothing. The trooper's time. The bailiff's time. The Judge's time. My time. I didn't even get a chance to defend myself. Even though I didn't have to, I wanted to. I wanted the satisfaction of explaining to someone how the system is a complete failure — practically designed to waste the state's resources and the precious time of its citizens. Thankfully, I'm a salaried employee. But what about the millions of people who would have had to take a day off from work to make such a wasteful court appearance?

So, why was this a failure and what lessons can be learned from this case study for anyone like the Feds whose thinking about tying the proper functioning of a car to a GPS device. First, the idea that a malfunctioning device landed me in court is simply absurd. My punishment (the $100 fine) was in essentially effect until proven otherwise. I'm just now imagining how, when my GPS device malfunctions while on the way to the hospital for an emergency (or to work, a job interview, etc. where delays could have other profound ramifications), my car simply stops and to get it working again, I have to go to court and the burden is on me to prove that the device stopped working. I see new meaning to the acronym F.O.R.D. (a joke among Chevy enthusiasts that means "found on road dead"). Can you imagine dead cars everywhere waiting to be reactivated?

Another reason my FastLane experience was a complete failure of technology is that the database exists for determining potential guilt or innocence. The license plate was obviously visible enough to look up my address in one database and send me a summons. Why not look me up in the other database — the one of people who have FastLane transponders — to see if maybe, just maybe, a FastLane transponder is assigned to my car. Perhaps a "hit" would have triggered a different process. Instead of issuing a summons, I would have been sent the same piece of paper that the aforementioned toll booth guy handed to me when the transponder originally malfunctioned. It could have come with a small pre-addressed box and started by saying "Our records indicate that there may be a problem with your transponder. This is your first and only warning. Another toll violation will trigger an automatic summons. To avoid a summons, please return your transponder in the box provided and we'll replace it. Please use the toll collectors' lanes until you have the new transponder." Or something like that. You get the picture. Let's say the total cost of this process is $15 (could it be anymore?). How does that compare to the amount of taxpayer money that's getting wasted chasing after honest drivers?

At this point, some people are saying, "Hey David. Maybe you loaned your transponder to someone else. Maybe you're trying to beat the system." First, the "system's" records would reflect the usage of the transponder by the person I presumably loaned it to. If no such usage is indicated, then, the authorities really have no grounds to assume foul play. Second, that's what warnings are for. Assuming that the transponder is functioning and, for some reason, I didn't have it with me and I really did run the tolls, I get one warning. After that, I get a summons. Total cost to the state? $3.00 (the toll that didn't get paid) and some postage required to send me the notice that was autogenerated by the system at a cost of about 1 cent.

I'm not done yet. What about the transponders? How about some way of testing them? For example, a button that activates an indicator light. Or, how about a big sign that stretches across the roadway about a mile ahead of the toll both that displays some indication (your license plate number, your transponder number, etc.) that your transponder is functioning?

The bottom line is that it's not just the fallibilty of the technology that's the problem. It's the assumption that people are guilty until proven innocent when the technology fails and the wasteful if not unconstitutional process that follows. What's even worse is that the technology actually exists to mitigate that assumption and how no one is bothering to use it.

Do you have your own personal case study of how technology is failing us as a people? Please use our comments section below to share it with ZDNet's readers, or share it me at david.berlind@cnet.com.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: business; government; gps; technology
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1 posted on 12/06/2005 10:24:12 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Mandatory GPS isn't a failure of technology, it's a failure of government.


2 posted on 12/06/2005 10:25:29 PM PST by Terpfen (Libby should hire Phoenix Wright.)
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To: nickcarraway

BTTT


3 posted on 12/06/2005 10:26:45 PM PST by Fiddlstix (Tagline Repair Service. Let us fix those broken Taglines. Inquire within(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: nickcarraway
inclusion of Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking devices in our cars. As I explain in that blog, I was even more horrified to learn about how the Feds have discussed how, if the devices fall out of touch with the GPS network, that our cars can automatically be disabled.

Instructions on how to disable or destroy the GPS on a vehicle without disabling the vehicle would be on the Internet before the first one is rolling off the assembly line.

Information wants to be free.

4 posted on 12/06/2005 10:27:47 PM PST by xrp (Conservative votes are to Republicans what 90% of black votes are to Democrats (taken for granted))
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To: nickcarraway

Where do they find such crazy guys named "Fed"?


5 posted on 12/06/2005 10:29:53 PM PST by coconutt2000 (NO MORE PEACE FOR OIL!!! DOWN WITH TYRANTS, TERRORISTS, AND TIMIDCRATS!!!! (3-T's For World Peace))
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To: nickcarraway
I was even more horrified to learn about how the Feds have discussed how, if the devices fall out of touch with the GPS network, that our cars can automatically be disabled.

All that would take is driving through a tunnel or into a parking garage. The GPS navigation system in recent Lincoln Navigators has a backup inertial guidence system that can continue giving position updates when the car is driven into places like that where the satellites can't be seen.

6 posted on 12/06/2005 10:30:13 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey hey ho ho Andy Heyward's got to go!)
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To: nickcarraway

excellent


7 posted on 12/06/2005 10:31:02 PM PST by samtheman
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To: nickcarraway

In the Dallas, Texas area the "Toll Tags" are indeed tied to a particular auto as I discovered when I got given new plates. I totally forgot to update my account and was rudely reminded by getting a ticket because my tag no longer matched my (new) plates. The ticket showed a very clear photo taken as I passed thru' the booth ! I pleaded ignorance in an email and they dropped the penalty $$.


8 posted on 12/06/2005 10:36:07 PM PST by 1066AD
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To: Paleo Conservative
All that would take is driving through a tunnel or into a parking garage.

Trees will block the signal too, but then reality never has been a deterrant when Congress is involved.

9 posted on 12/06/2005 10:36:34 PM PST by Carry_Okie (There are people in power who are REALLY stupid.)
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To: nickcarraway

Mrs. Fierro's getting something like this for Christmas (don't tell her, now) -- we'll see how it works out.

10 posted on 12/06/2005 10:37:12 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: nickcarraway
Earlier today, I was horrified to learn that the Feds have considered manadating the inclusion of Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking devices in our cars.

While it makes a nice entry into a long rant, its an urban legend, and there is no federal plan to put gps tracking into cars.

Some rental car companies do this in areas where car theft is high, but even these do not disable the car, simply result in a large bill if you violate the area rules.

Further, gps units do not track cars, they are a receive only device, and would have to be ganged with a transmitter to some receiver somewhere, which would simply not be able to handle the load. (The hidden truth is that things like On-Star do not scale well, and if even a quarter of US cars were equipped with on-star the system would be unusable.

Relax, people, its a myth.

11 posted on 12/06/2005 10:38:03 PM PST by adamsjas
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To: martin_fierro

Cou;d they add an RFID chip that would disable her credit card when she is in the vicinity of an RFID establishment.


12 posted on 12/06/2005 10:39:09 PM PST by nickcarraway (I'm Only Alive, Because a Judge Hasn't Ruled I Should Die...)
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To: adamsjas
Relax, people, its a myth.

Seems I've heard that before regarding KISS, mandatory seat belt laws ..... I don't trust any one that says "relax people" when we are discussing the Feds.

13 posted on 12/06/2005 11:01:59 PM PST by Just A Nobody (I - LOVE - my attitude problem! WBB lives on. Beware the Enemedia.)
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To: nickcarraway
The bottom line is that it's not just the fallibilty of the technology that's the problem. It's the assumption that people are guilty until proven innocent when the technology fails and the wasteful if not unconstitutional process that follows. What's even worse is that the technology actually exists to mitigate that assumption and how no one is bothering to use it.

This paragraph errs in that the author considers it a failure of technology - it is NOT. These failures have been carefully considered and the corrections thereto have been rejected, because the gooberment's purpose here is to generate revenue, and statistics bear out the fact that most people will pay the ticket; not fight it.

14 posted on 12/06/2005 11:09:13 PM PST by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: Terpfen

Everything the government seems to do fails in the intended, I mean, stated goal... at least it seems to


15 posted on 12/06/2005 11:39:22 PM PST by GeronL (Leftism is the INSANE Cult of the Artificial)
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To: martin_fierro

Sorry, I meant retail establishment.


16 posted on 12/07/2005 12:05:37 AM PST by nickcarraway (I'm Only Alive, Because a Judge Hasn't Ruled I Should Die...)
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To: adamsjas
Of course you are correct that the "GPS" system could not work as described.

A two way fully encrypted Diffie-Hellman handshake system could be made to work with sufficiently complex control chips. Of course the chips must erase their memories according to instructions, when being x-rayed, opened, chilled to excess, etc. and communicate with other chips in it's system only in a fully hard crypto way. The growth industry would be finding larger prime numbers.

The nationwide communication network needed would make the Internet look like a toy.

Probably when the Feds buy this wonderful system it will have been designed and built by the Chinese.

I am talking in jest, about 10%. Unfortunately the system is buildable. Shucks, just put the system in a chrome steel welded on neckband that cannot be removed without explosive decapitation. Just hope the darn thing's software wasn't written by Microsoft!

Dark visions, dark visions. Sometimes people say I have a strange sense of humor! Can you believe it?
17 posted on 12/07/2005 1:30:07 AM PST by Iris7 ("Let me go to the house of the Father.")
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To: nickcarraway
The tunnels will be packed...

My cell phone company has been trying to sell me on upgrading from my old 3 watt analog phone to one with GPS. Problem is, the digital model will not reach from where I work to the nearest tower without shelling out about $350 for amplifier, directional antenna, cable, etc. I already get out just fine with the bag phone and similar equipment.

The nitwit salesperson said "But it has GPS, it will tell us where you are if there is an emergency."

Yeah, right. How isit going to do that if I am in my vehicle in the 'dead zone' between amplified directional signal transmission and being able to hit a tower otherwise?

As for lost, there are not so many roads out there that I done't know where I am, and failing that, a Garmin can be had for $129.00

Big brother hasn't really started watching yet.

18 posted on 12/07/2005 1:48:03 AM PST by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly.)
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To: Iris7
A two way fully encrypted Diffie-Hellman handshake system could be made to work with sufficiently complex control chips. Of course the chips must erase their memories according to instructions, when being x-rayed, opened, chilled to excess, etc. and communicate with other chips in it's system only in a fully hard crypto way. The growth industry would be finding larger prime numbers.

Baffle gab.

Nothing more complex than cell phone technology is needed to track cars. They determine their position with gps, and echo that position along with their vin number, either on sat frequencies as used by On Star, or simple cell frequencies . No encryption necessary.

19 posted on 12/07/2005 1:50:38 AM PST by adamsjas
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To: Smokin' Joe
My cell phone company has been trying to sell me on upgrading from my old 3 watt analog phone to one with GPS

They want to, and will, drop analog, soon.

The industry is two technologies past analog, and as the transmitters fail they are not being replaced. Its cheaper to put up more cell towers using one technology (GSM) than it is to maintain three different transmission technologies on older towers.

Enjoy it while you can, it will be gone soon, along with my CDMA phone. Its all going GSM.

20 posted on 12/07/2005 1:55:14 AM PST by adamsjas
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