From WordNetDaily.com
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/fedwilltrackcars07oct04.shtml
Oct. 7, 2004
A little-known federal agency is planning a new monitoring
program by which the government would track every car on the road by using
onboard transceivers.
The agency, the Intelligent Transportation Systems Joint Program Office
(www.its.dot.gov ), is part of the
Department of Transportation. According to an extensive report in the Charlotte,
N.C., Creative Loafing http://snipurl.com/9lplhttp://snipurl.com/9lpl ,
the agency doesn't respond to public inquiries about its activity.
According to the report, cutting-edge tracking technology will be used by
government transportation management centers to monitor every aspect of
transportation. Under the plan, not only will movement be monitored but
it also will be archived in massive databases for future use.
The paper reports a group of car manufacturers, technology companies and
government interests have worked toward implementing the project for 13
years.
States the Creative Loafing report:
"The only way for people to evade the national transportation tracking
system they're creating will be to travel on foot. Drive your car, and your
every movement could be recorded and archived. The federal government will
know the exact route you drove to work, how many times you braked along
the way, the precise moment you arrived and that every other Tuesday you
opt to ride the bus.
"They'll know you're due for a transmission repair and that you've
neglected to fix the ever-widening crack that resulted from a pebble dinging
your windshield."
The agency's website says its purpose is to "use advanced technology
to improve the efficiency and safety of our nation's surface transportation
system."
Critics believe the program will be used to line the pockets of business
interests that stand to gain from the sale of needed technology and that
the government will use the data collected to tax drivers on their driving
habits.
Though the program has ominous privacy implications, Creative Loafing reports
none of the privacy-rights organizations it contacted were aware of the
government's plans.
The report states that more than $4 billion in federal tax dollars has already
been spent to lay the foundation for the system, which will use GPS technology
and other methods to monitor Americans' movements.
The plan includes transceivers, or "onboard units," that will
transmit data from each car to the system, the first models of which are
expected to be unveiled next spring. By 2010, the paper reported, automakers
hope to start installing them in cars. The goal is to equip 57 million vehicles
by 2015.
Creative Loafing quotes Bill Jones, technical director of the Intelligent
Transportation Systems Joint Program Office, from a speech he gave in January.
"The concept," said Jones, "is that vehicle manufacturers
will install a communications device on the vehicle starting at some future
date, and equipment will be installed on the nation's transportation system
to allow all vehicles to communicate with the infrastructure."
"The whole idea here is that we would capture data from a large number
of vehicles," Jones said at another meeting of transportation officials
in May. "That data could then be used by public jurisdictions for traffic
management purposes and also by private industry, such as DaimlerChrysler,
for the services that they wish to provide for their customers."
The plan sees the federal government working with auto manufacturers to
place the transponders in vehicles at the factory, giving consumers little
chance to drive a new car not tethered to transportation computers.
One of the program's visions is for transportation officials to share collected
data with law enforcement, meaning a driver potentially could get a speeding
ticket based on information stored in a government computer.
Proponents of the system say the safety benefits are enormous. One goal
is to virtually eliminate auto accidents by having vehicles "communicate"
with each other.
Neil Schuster is president and CEO of the Intelligent Transportation Society
of America, a group of government and business people that's the driving
force behind the program.
"When I get on an airplane everyone in the system knows where I am,"
Schuster told Creative Loafing. "They know which tickets I bought.
You could probably go back through United Airlines and find out everywhere
I traveled in the last year. Do I worry about that? No. We've decided that
airline safety is so important that we're going to put a transponder in
every airplane and track it. We know the passenger list of every airplane
and we're tracking these things so that planes don't crash into each other.
Shouldn't we have that same sense of concern and urgency about road travel?
The average number of fatalities each year from airplanes is less than 100.
The average number of deaths on the highway is 42,000. I think we've got
to enter the debate as to whether we're willing to change that in a substantial
way and it may be that we have to allow something on our vehicles that makes
our car safer. ... I wouldn't mind some of this information being available
to make my roads safer so some idiot out there doesn't run into me."
At least one proponent of the plan is actually using the term "Orwellian"
to describe it.
At a workshop for industry and government leaders last year, the Charlotte
paper reports, John Worthington, president and CEO of TransCore - one of
the companies currently under contract to develop the onboard units for
cars - described the system as "kind of an Orwellian all-singing, all-dancing
collector/aggregator/disseminator of transportation information."
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