Tesla data helped police after Las Vegas truck explosion, but experts 
		have wider privacy concerns
						
		 
		
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		 [January 06, 2025]  By 
		BERNARD CONDON 
						
		NEW YORK (AP) — Your car is spying on you. 
		 
		That is one takeaway from the fast, detailed data that Tesla collected 
		on the driver of one of its Cybertrucks that exploded in Las Vegas 
		earlier this week. Privacy data experts say the deep dive by Elon Musk’s 
		company was impressive, but also shines a spotlight on a difficult 
		question as vehicles become less like cars and more like computers on 
		wheels. 
		 
		Is your car company violating your privacy rights? 
		 
		“You might want law enforcement to have the data to crack down on 
		criminals, but can anyone have access to it?” said Jodi Daniels, CEO of 
		privacy consulting firm Red Clover Advisors. “Where is the line?” 
		 
		Many of the latest cars not only know where you’ve been and where you 
		are going, but also often have access to your contacts, your call logs, 
		your texts and other sensitive information thanks to cell phone syncing. 
		 
		The data collected by Musk’s electric car company after the Cybertruck 
		packed with fireworks burst into flames in front of the Trump 
		International Hotel Wednesday proved valuable to police in helping track 
		the driver’s movements. 
		 
		Within hours of the New Year’s Day explosion that burned the driver 
		beyond recognition and injured seven, Tesla was able to track Matthew 
		Livelsberger’s movements in detail from Denver to Las Vegas, and also 
		confirm that the problem was explosives in the truck, not the truck 
		itself. Tesla used data collected from charging stations and from 
		onboard software -- and to great acclaim. 
  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		“I have to thank Elon Musk, specifically,” said Las Vegas Metropolitan 
		Police Department Sheriff Kevin McMahill to reporters. “He gave us quite 
		a bit of additional information.“ 
		 
		Some privacy experts were less enthusiastic. 
		 
		“It reveals the kind of sweeping surveillance going on,” said David 
		Choffnes, executive director of the Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute 
		at Northeastern University in Boston. “When something bad happens, it’s 
		helpful, but it’s a double edged sword. Companies that collect this data 
		can abuse it.” 
		 
		General Motors, for instance, was sued in August by the Texas attorney 
		general for allegedly selling data from 1.8 million drivers to insurance 
		companies without their consent. 
		 
		Cars equipped with cameras to enable self-driving features have added a 
		new security risk. Tesla itself came under fire after Reuters reported 
		how employees from 2019 through 2022 shared drivers’ sensitive videos 
		and recordings with each other, including videos of road rage incidents 
		and, in one case, nudity. 
		 
		Tesla did not respond to emailed questions about its privacy policy. On 
		its website, Tesla says it follows strict rules for keeping names and 
		information private. 
		 
		
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            Clark County Sheriff Kevin McMahill briefs the media about the Tesla 
			Cybertruck which exploded in front of the entrance to Trump 
			International Hotel in Las Vegas Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025, in Las 
			Vegas. (Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP) 
            
			  “No one but you would have knowledge 
			of your activities, location, or a history of where you’ve been,” 
			according to a statement. "Your information is kept private and 
			secure.” 
			 
			Auto analyst Sam Abuelsamid at Telemetry Insight, said he doesn't 
			think Tesla is “especially worse” than other auto companies in 
			handling customer data, but he is still concerned. 
			 
			“This is one of the biggest ethical issues we have around modern 
			vehicles. They're connected,” he said. “Consumers need to have 
			control over their data.” 
			 
			Tensions were high when the Cybertruck parked at the front doors of 
			Trump’s hotel began smoking, then burst into flames. Just hours 
			earlier a driver in another vehicle using the same peer-to-peer car 
			rental service, Turo, had killed 15 people after slamming into a 
			crowd in New Orleans in what law enforcement is calling a terrorist 
			attack. 
			 
			Shortly before 1 p.m., the Las Vegas police announced they were 
			investigating a second incident. 
			 
			“The fire is out,” the police announced on the social media platform 
			X, one of Musk’s other companies. “Please avoid the area.” 
			 
			Tesla shortly thereafter swung into action. 
			 
			“The whole Tesla senior team is investigating this matter right 
			now,” Musk wrote on X. “Will post more information as soon as we 
			learn anything.” 
			 
			Over the next few hours, Tesla was able to piece together 
			Livelsberger’s journey over five days and four states by tracking, 
			among other things, his recharging stops in various locations, 
			including Monument, Colorado, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and 
			Flagstaff, Arizona. 
			 
			There are no federal laws regulating car data similar to those that 
			restrict information collection and sharing by banks and health care 
			providers. And state laws are a grab-bag of various rules, mostly 
			focused on data privacy in general. 
			 
			Daniels, the privacy consultant, thinks that new national laws are 
			needed because rules have not kept up with technology. 
			 
			“I think law enforcement should have access to data that can help 
			them solve things quickly,” she said. “But we have a right to 
			privacy.” 
			
			
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