Senators slam carmakers for “hypocrisy” on data collection, repairs
Senators Elizabeth Warren, Josh Hawley, and Jeff Merkely sent a letter to the CEOs of the major car manufacturers urging the companies to comply with right-to-repair laws, and requested details of their data-collection practices.
The senators wrote:
“We are particularly disturbed by the automakers’ hypocrisy with regard to data sharing. The industry has raised concerns about data sharing with independent repair shops to justify opposing right-to-repair, while earning profits from sharing large amounts of personal data with insurance companies.”
Car manufacturers have come under intense scrutiny for collecting sensitive driver data without clear consent as well as for selling this data to data brokers and insurance companies.
The letters were sent to the CEOs of Ford, GM, Tesla, Stellantis, Subaru, Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, Volkswagen, and Toyota.
Update (December 20, 12 p.m. ET): added additional carmakers to the story.
“We are particularly disturbed by the automakers’ hypocrisy with regard to data sharing. The industry has raised concerns about data sharing with independent repair shops to justify opposing right-to-repair, while earning profits from sharing large amounts of personal data with insurance companies.”
Car manufacturers have come under intense scrutiny for collecting sensitive driver data without clear consent as well as for selling this data to data brokers and insurance companies.
The letters were sent to the CEOs of Ford, GM, Tesla, Stellantis, Subaru, Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, Volkswagen, and Toyota.
Update (December 20, 12 p.m. ET): added additional carmakers to the story.