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Related: About this forumBiden Administration Tells Car Manufacturers to Ignore Massachusetts Right-to-Repair Law
Source: Gizmodo
Biden Administration Tells Car Manufacturers to Ignore Right-to-Repair Law
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration advised 22 car manufacturers including BMW, Ferrari, Ford, and Hyundai to ignore a Massachusetts law.
By Kevin Hurler
Published Yesterday
The right-to-repair movement has suffered a setback in Massachusetts this week. The Biden administration told car manufacturers not to comply with a state law that would allow independent auto shops and car owners the ability to fix their own vehicles.
Vice first reported that the major concern the Biden administrations National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has with the law, which is colloquially titled the Data Access Law, is hacking. To express these concerns, Kerry Kolodziej, from assistant chief counsel at the NHTSA, authored a letter (dated yesterday) to the chief counsel of nearly two dozen major automotive manufacturers including BMW, Ferrari, Ford, and Hyundai. Kolodziej argues in the letter that since the law grants open access to a cars telematicswhich are used to wirelessly send commands to carsa malicious actor here or abroad could remotely command a car. The outcomes, the NHSTA says, could be vehicle crashes, passenger injuries, or death.
Open access to vehicle manufacturers telematics offerings with the ability to remotely send commands allows for manipulation of systems on a vehicle, including safety-critical functions such as steering, acceleration, or braking, as well as equipment required by Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) such as air bags and electronic stability control, Kolodziej wrote in the letter.
According to The Boston Globe, the Data Access Law, which is more formally known as Chapter 93K, was enacted after Massachusetts residents voted in favor of the law on a 2020 ballot. Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell announced in March that the law would move forward, with enforcement beginning June 1 of this year. For some time, the law was stuck in the District Court of Massachusetts after the Alliance for Automotive Innovation filed a lawsuit to stop it. The letter also vaguely reminds these car manufacturers of their commitment to vehicle and passenger safety under the National Highway Traffic Safety Actessentially instructing them to ignore Chapter 93K.
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Read more: https://gizmodo.com/biden-administration-says-ignore-right-to-repair-car-la-1850539378
enough
(13,466 posts)gay texan
(2,906 posts)jimfields33
(19,314 posts)This is a first.
LuvLoogie
(7,585 posts)The Biden administration would be on board with the right to repair.
Best_man23
(5,127 posts)However, with all the newer features and the move to autonomous control of vehicle systems, the cyber security aspect of this needs to be buttoned down.