Posted on 12/12/2003 2:11:35 PM PST by Redcloak
Big Brother on Board
Charles R. Smith
Thursday, Dec. 11, 2003
OnStar Bugging Your Car
Would it surprise you to find out that the FBI might be able to monitor private conversations in your car? A recent court case revealed that the FBI used the popular OnStar system to do just that.
GM cars equipped with OnStar are supposed to be the leading edge of safety and technology. OnStar has run a recent blitz of commercials citing helpless motorists calling in with every type of emergency, from a heart attack to locking the keys inside the car. In the advertising world, OnStar reacts quickly by sending help or even unlocking the car.
However, buried deep inside the OnStar system is a feature few suspected the ability to eavesdrop on unsuspecting motorists.
The FBI found out about this passive listening feature and promptly served OnStar with a court order forcing the company to give it access. The court order the FBI gave OnStar was not something out of the Patriot Act involving international terrorism or national security but a simple criminal case.
According to court records, OnStar complied with the order but filed a protest lawsuit against the FBI.
Yet the FBI was able to enforce the original legal order and completed its surveillance because OnStar's lawsuit took nearly two years to pass through the court system.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals recently ruled in OnStar's favor. The ruling was not based on invasion-of-privacy grounds or some other legitimate constitutional basis. The FBI lost because the OnStar passive listening feature disables the emergency signal, the very life-saving call for help that the advertisements tout as the main reason to purchase the system.
"The precedent has been set," stated former Georgia Rep. Bob Barr.
"The grounds on which the 9th Circuit reached the decision were not on the privacy aspects of the case. Under the CALEA [Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act] laws, the FBI blocking of the emergency signal constituted a breach of the consumers contract."
The technical problem of blocking the emergency signal is clearly one that the FBI tech teams can overcome. Thus, under the current ruling, the FBI can resume using OnStar to monitor subject vehicles once it has solved the emergency issue.
(Excerpt) Read more at newsmax.com ...
On another note, it might be a good time to sell your GM stock right now. If the presence of this "listening device" has not been clearly identified as an OnStar feature, they're going to face billions of dollars in civil damages and hundreds of millions in costs to take the damned thing out of cars that people have already purchased.
Hey, the brakes stopped working! Somebody is laughing on my car stereo speakers! The steering wheel is acting funny! I think I have a................................
Hate to bring this up, but your cell phone ALREADY is a passive listening device, even turned off. So long as the battery is in it, Law enforcement can listen to you conversations if they desire to.
Simple, company needs a little more cash flow, GM hits a button and red lights tell dumb little old ladies and men to take their car in for repair. Give them a couple of grand and they will turn the lite off.
Nuh uh! He lives in the glove box.
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