Friday, July 24, 2020

The right to repair ballot question is heating up


Have you seen those scary commercials about the ballot question 1? Holy Molly..... the opposition is 
really going all out to scare everyone.  

 From the Globe: 
Car manufacturers have found a formidable ally in their fight against the new “right to repair” ballot question in Massachusetts: the federal government.
A top official at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration sent a detailed letter to the cochairmen of the Legislature’s consumer protection committee this week, raising concerns about the ballot question and its potentially adverse effects on public safety.
At issue is legislation that will go before voters in November that would give independent mechanics access to wirelessly transmitted information specific to particular vehicles. Opening up access to vehicle “telematics,” wrote the agency’s deputy administrator, James Owens, raises a host of cybersecurity concerns. A cyber attack on a motor vehicle, particularly one moving at high speeds, would pose an “incredible amount of danger,” Owens wrote.
The letter coincides with the launch of an advertising campaign by the industry-funded Coalition for Safe and Secure Data. Some of the federal agency’s points overlap with the coalition’s main argument: that the ballot question, financed in large part by auto-parts companies through two trade groups, would provide too much real-time access to consumers’ vehicle systems and locations, potentially exposing the data to wrongdoers.
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This isn’t the first time these sides have fought, with Massachusetts as the battleground. This is actually a sequel to the first right-to-repair ballot question, passed by voters in 2012, and subsequently tweaked by the Legislature in 2013. That law required manufacturers to provide repair codes to independent repair shops. But the proponents are back at it this year, saying that an increasing amount of repair data is being handled wirelessly, via telematics systems, and would not be covered by the 2013 law.
By the time it’s over, the warring industries probably will burn through millions of dollars on the fight. It’s not clear how much has been spent so far on marketing and other expenses, though, as ballot committees don’t yet have to disclose their spending for 2020.
It’s possible some of the language from the federal agency will become fodder for the automakers’ ads. The ballot initiative, Owens wrote, requires manufacturers to redesign their vehicles in a manner that introduces cybersecurity risks. (The bill would take effect beginning with 2022 models.) Telematics systems, Owens wrote, remain of great concern to federal regulators, in part because vulnerabilities in such systems could allow “malicious actors to cause a crash or incident” or “potentially interface with multiple vehicles at a time.”
Conor Yunits, spokesman for the auto manufacturer-backed coalition, said in a statement that Question 1, as the ballot question is known, is not about who can fix your car. Rather, it’s about how many companies and people can remotely access your vehicle’s data and location, he said, and the exposure of this sensitive information to “strangers, hackers and criminals, without any safeguards.”
The Massachusetts Right to Repair committee says this is nonsense. Tommy Hickey, its director, said in a statement that NHTSA is not fully informed about Question 1. The ballot question, he said, allows only mechanical information to be shared for the purpose of repairing a car, with the owner’s permission.
“It shows the awesome power of the automakers in Washington and . . . the Trump administration that the NHTSA would weigh in erroneously about a Massachusetts consumer issue this quickly and without consulting the sponsors and its experts,” Hickey said.

6 Comments:

At July 26, 2020 at 8:42 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Those commercials are bullshit and designed to scare not to inform. I hope the League is planning to do something on both ballot questions

 
At July 27, 2020 at 7:06 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I wonder what Parker Pillsbury would think of this? You should type in Parker Pillsbury on Facebook or check your messenger.

 
At July 27, 2020 at 10:22 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sounds like those opposed are spewing a lot of false information which seems to be more and more prevalent now than ever before. We mood and informed and honest discussion on this

 
At July 27, 2020 at 11:30 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Isn’t Parker Pillsbury long dead? So why do you care what he would think? Sounds to me like the idiot who posted that is jealous of Jim’s lineage. Must be some short guy with a Napoleon complex who posted that don’t you think?

 
At July 27, 2020 at 1:42 PM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

My family has nothing to do with the ballot question on right to repair. Yes there are a few kids named Parker Pillsbury on FB. I have no idea who they are or their parents are though.

Most years when ballot questions appear, lots of false and misleading info is spewed on TV and in print.

The League will be doing something on both questions.

 
At July 27, 2020 at 2:39 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Looking forward to hearing the facts at a LWV sponsored event

 

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