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Government Shouldn't Be Suing Navigation Innovator, Waze, It Should Emulate It
RCM ^
| 06/21/2018
| Gus Van Horn
Posted on 06/21/2018 8:21:32 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: Grampa Dave
They followed your vehicle and others with Fast Pass or whatever tracking signal your smartphone or vehicle was transmitting.
Exactly... You're being tracked, folks need to get over the illusion they have some control over it... you don't.
To: CTyank
As budgets become tighter, we will probably see tickets issued via Fast Pass for exceeding the speed limits.
22
posted on
06/21/2018 10:56:47 AM PDT
by
Grampa Dave
(If voting couled actually change anything, it would also be illegal!)
To: CTyank
I’m an 80+ mph traveler and never hog the high speed lane(there is nothing worse that a moron cruising in the left lane at 5 MPH over the limit). Waze users have always been pretty accurate in helping with that. Actually, there's nothing worse than irresponsible drivers who think the passing lane is meant to be used for driving at reckless speeds. [wink]
23
posted on
06/21/2018 10:59:16 AM PDT
by
Sparticus
(Primary the Tuesday group!)
To: CTyank
As budgets become tighter, we will probably see tickets issued via Fast Pass for exceeding the speed limits.
California and other Blue states will be the first to do that.
Our Fast Pass stays at our home unless we go where it is needed, about once every 2-3 months. If we don’t have it, we still go through the Fast Pass line and get billed.
24
posted on
06/21/2018 10:59:45 AM PDT
by
Grampa Dave
(If voting couled actually change anything, it would also be illegal!)
To: jrestrepo
I am not positive about this, but you could go into Settings /Apps/Permissions for Google Maps and turn off/on GPS as needed. Wouldnt that work?
It depends, as long as your okay with Google and your cell company to continue to gather exactly the same data after you do that (remember google owns waze) then yes, that would change nothing. If you didn't do that, it still wouldn't change anything.
You're probably thinking, well I could turn GPS off all together. Well that sounds good, except your carrier, who provides that data to "first tier" partners and until this week "second tier" (they announced they'd no longer sell it to them), is still gathering the data as long as the phone is on and connected to the network.
So if it makes you feel better, by all means do it, but it has no impact on the device being continually tracked.
To: SeekAndFind
Public streets are public. Don’t like me being on the one you happen to live on? Tough luck. Move to the country.
26
posted on
06/21/2018 11:09:40 AM PDT
by
pepsi_junkie
(Russians couldnt have done a better job destroying sacred American institutions than Democrats have)
To: Pecos
A few weeks ago. my wife ignored a Waze suggestion to avoid a particular interstate, resulting in a tire ruined due to a pot hole. One thing that Waze does, which I do not like, is select a circuitous route that seems to it to be 30 seconds faster but is more stressful and often slower. For example on my way to New Jersy from Long Island its sent me into mid-town Manhattan at 4:30 in the afternoon on a Thursday to have me cross busiest traffic area to get to a tunnel because it saw a 10 or 15 minute backup on the Belt Parkway in Long Island. I would have gladly sat in traffic for 15 or even 20 minutes to not have gone through that. Another time it sent me through the ghettos of East New York and Brownsville to shave five minutes off my ride, which basically didn't even work because of traffic lights. But it did shave 5 years off my life, so there's that. Basically when making that commute now I just ignore Waze and take my preferred route and use Waze for alerts only.
27
posted on
06/21/2018 11:17:35 AM PDT
by
pepsi_junkie
(Russians couldnt have done a better job destroying sacred American institutions than Democrats have)
To: CTyank
That’s another good point.
I was in DC a month ago and they have traffic speed cams all over town.
Waze alerted me to every one down to the meter.
At least 20 cam passes, not one ticket.
Beautiful.
28
posted on
06/21/2018 1:14:39 PM PDT
by
Eddie01
To: pepsi_junkie
Waze got me from Laguardia to Connecticut. Had never been to New York.
I said to the Alamo lady can you on a map how to get to Connecticut? She stared at me like I was a crazy as I was.
I literally trusted Waze with my life. It was all I had.
There are a hundred interchanges in between. In and out of the Bronx. Flawless. Got me back too.
29
posted on
06/21/2018 1:19:18 PM PDT
by
Eddie01
To: pepsi_junkie
One thing that Waze does, which I do not like, is select a circuitous route that seems to it to be 30 seconds faster but is more stressful and often slower.
Waze did that to me traveling through Nashville. The interstate was clogged but I knew I didn’t want to be on surface streets in a city I don’t know. You can set it up in preferences to not do that.
30
posted on
06/21/2018 4:30:27 PM PDT
by
hanamizu
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