Tracking and its Effect on Your Auto Insurance Claims

Just after the operation to insert the RFID ta...
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When it comes to being tracked with RFID, there are some issues with paranoia and confusion. People worry that everything they do is being tracked and they are being followed and spied on. This is really not the case. One thing that may actually be tracked, though, is what you do with your vehicle. Many newer cars have something similar to an airplane’s ‘black box.’ While it won’t record your conversations or anything like that, it can be used if you make auto insurance claims. It will show how fast you were going at the time of the accident, if you were applying the brakes, and even if you had your seat belt on.

The idea that what they do in their own vehicle is being tracked can make some people nervous, but it’s actually a great idea. If you have to make an insurance claim for an accident and you’re trying to show that you’re not at fault, what better way to do that than have proof that you weren’t speeding, etc. There are some times when tracking can be very beneficial, and that’s just one of those times. Of course, it’s also important to remember that older cars don’t have that technology. You won’t be tracked, so you’ll avoid the cons of it and miss out on the pros.

Your car may also be tracked on things like toll roads or if you park in certain lots. None of these are done to invade your privacy, and what you do in your own home is still private, for the most part. Some forms of tracking (like your IP address on the Internet) have become so common that there really isn’t any way to avoid them and still use technology. They help more than hinder, and are mostly just an accepted part of everyday life.

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Privacy Concerns

Principle of the IDsec protocol
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There are a lot of people that get up in arms about privacy, asserting that personal freedoms are the most important things under the sun. And in America, those freedoms have stood against various assaults over centuries, so the point made is legitimate. But is there a much deeper implication to the depth of one’s need for privacy? How much crime has been covered up, or gotten away with, under the guise of privacy? With freedom comes responsibility, and yet more people than ever before seem to turn a blind eye to crimes that occur in their own neighborhoods. If criminal activity doesn’t involve someone directly, they are more likely, in the 21st century, to turn a blind eye to the activity than at seemingly any point in prior history.

And that, of course, is an extension of the idea of privacy. To ignore that which has occurred, or is occurring, right in one’s field of vision. To not get involved, to stay separate – these are all choices and decisions that are permissible when privacy rules the day. And that could be the downfall of a relatively safe and crime free neighborhood – that individuals begin to choose their own privacy over other concerns.

Sure, it’s a hassle to deal with police when a crime doesn’t involve oneself. But whether a crime happens down the street or via online methods – there are a host of new ways to engage in criminal activity now that the Internet is pervasive in people’s lives – it should still be important to step forward to stand against wrongdoing. Privacy should not be a banner to hide behind, causing laxity in the citizenry. Just as free ringtones shouldn’t cause one to change their phone’s sound twice a day every day for a year, privacy shouldn’t be a catch-all phrase that allows people to shirk their basic human duties.

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