Mozilla calls cars from 25 automakers 'data privacy nightmares on wheels'

By Jessica Lyons Hardcastle Wed 6 Sep 2023
https://www.theregister.com/2023/09/06/mozilla_vehicle_data_privacy/


Privacy-invading data harvesting by smartphones, wearable devices, smart 
doorbells, and reproductive health apps are well known, but the Mozilla 
Foundation has found the worst threat to your privacy may be parked in your 
driveway.

The foundation, the Firefox browser maker’s netizen-rights org, assessed the 
privacy policies and practices of 25 automakers and found all failed its 
consumer privacy tests and thereby earned its Privacy Not Included (PNI) 
warning label.

https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/categories/cars/

In research published Tuesday, the org warned that manufacturers may collect 
and commercially exploit much more than location history, driving habits, 
in-car browser histories, and music preferences from today's internet-connected 
vehicles.

Instead, some makers may handle deeply personal data, such as – depending on 
the privacy policy – sexual activity, immigration status, race, facial 
expressions, weight, health, and even genetic information, the Mozilla team 
found.

Cars may collect at least some of that info about drivers and passengers using 
sensors, microphones, cameras, phones, and other devices people connect to 
their network-connected cars, according to Mozilla.

And they collect even more info from car apps – such as Sirius XM or Google 
Maps – plus dealerships, and vehicle telematics.

Some car brands may then share or sell this information to third parties. 
Mozilla found 21 of the 25 automakers it considered say they may share customer 
info with service providers, data brokers, and the like, and 19 of the 25 say 
they can sell personal data.

More than half (56 percent) also say they share customer information with the 
government or law enforcement in response to a "request." This isn't 
necessarily a court-ordered warrant, and can also be a more informal request.

And some – like Nissan – may also use this private data to develop customer 
profiles that describe drivers' "preferences, characteristics, psychological 
trends, predispositions, behavior, attitudes, intelligence, abilities, and 
aptitudes."

Yes, you read that correctly. According to Mozilla's privacy researchers, 
Nissan says it can infer how smart you are, then sell that assessment to third 
parties.

"Why does a car company need to make an inference about my intelligence? It 
gets creepy really fast," PNI program director Jen Caltrider told The Register.

Nissan, according to the research, is "probably the worst car company we 
reviewed, and that says something because all car companies are really bad at 
privacy."

"Please people, if you care even a little about privacy, please stay as far 
away from Nissan's cars, apps, and connected services as you possibly can," it 
continues.

According to the Nissan USA privacy notice, the automaker may collect and share 
a ton data for targeted marketing purposes, including:

Sensitive personal information, including driver's license number, national or 
state identification number, citizenship status, immigration status, race, 
national origin, religious or philosophical beliefs, sexual orientation, sexual 
activity, precise geolocation, health diagnosis data, and genetic information.

"Nissan's privacy policy stands out as one of the most amazing things I've ever 
read," Caltrider said. "They aren't shy about saying they could collect all of 
this stuff."

But Nissan isn't the only brand to collect information that seems completely 
irrelevant to the vehicle itself or the driver's transportation habits.

"Kia mentions sex life," Caltrider said. "General Motors and Ford both 
mentioned race and sexual orientation. Hyundai said that they could share data 
with government and law enforcement based on formal or informal requests. Car 
companies can collect even more information than reproductive health apps in a 
lot of ways."

(Some) car brands respond:

A Nissan spokesperson provided the following comment to The Register: "We're 
just being made aware of this report so it will take a bit of time to review it 
and provide a response."

Caltrider said the Privacy Not Included team contacted Nissan and all of the 
other brands listed in the research: that's Lincoln, Mercedes-Benz, Acura, 
Buick, GMC, Cadillac, Fiat, Jeep, Chrysler, BMW, Subaru, Dacia, Hyundai, Dodge, 
Lexus, Chevrolet, Tesla, Ford, Honda, Kia, Audi, Volkswagen, Toyota and Renault.

Only three – Mercedes-Benz, Honda, and Ford – responded, we're told.

"Mercedes-Benz did answer a few of our questions, which we appreciate," 
Caltrider said. "Honda pointed us continually to their public privacy 
documentation to answer your questions, but they didn't clarify anything. And 
Ford said they discussed our request internally and made the decision not to 
participate."

This makes Mercedes' response to The Register a little puzzling. "We are 
committed to using data responsibly," a spokesperson told us. "We have not 
received or reviewed the study you are referring to yet and therefore decline 
to comment to this specifically."

A spokesperson for the four Fiat-Chrysler-owned brands (Fiat, Chrysler, Jeep, 
and Dodge) told us: "We are reviewing accordingly. Data privacy is a key 
consideration as we continually seek to serve our customers better."

Representatives for Kia, meanwhile, told us it doesn't harvest details of 
people's sex lives, though it includes it in its privacy policy as an example 
of what could be collected: “While we may collect certain types of personal 
information, including 'sensitive personal information' as defined by the 
California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, not all types of personal or sensitive 
personal information are collected by us – as stated in our privacy policy.

"Whether certain information is collected by us depends on the context in which 
a consumer interacts with us. To clarify, Kia does not and has never collected 
'sex life or sexual orientation' information from vehicles or consumers in the 
context of providing the Kia Connect Services.

"This category of information is included in our privacy policy, which tracks 
the CCPA, as an example of the type of information defined as 'sensitive 
personal information' under Section 1708.140(ae) of the CCPA.”

"The privacy of consumers is important to Kia America," the automaker's team 
added.

BMW told us, through a spokesperson, that the carmaker "takes data privacy and 
data security of our customers very seriously" and sent the following response:

For transparency, BMW NA provides our customers with comprehensive data privacy 
notices regarding the collection of their personal information. For individual 
control, BMW NA allows vehicle drivers to make granular choices regarding the 
collection and processing of their personal information. We voluntarily comply 
with a customer's data privacy requests (for example, request for access, 
deletion, correction) even in states where we are not required to do so. 
Further, we allow our customers to delete their data whether on their apps, 
vehicles or online.

BMW NA does not sell our customer's in-vehicle personal information.

BMW NA provides our customers the opportunity to opt out of BMW targeted 
behavioral advertising on the internet. With respect to data security, we take 
comprehensive measures to protect our customers' data. Please understand we 
cannot comment further without having seen the survey or its results.


The Mozilla Foundation also called out consent as an issue some automakers have 
placed in a blind spot.

"I call this out in the Subaru review, but it's not limited to Subaru: it's the 
idea that anybody that is a user of the services of a connected car, anybody 
that's in a car that uses services is considered a user, and any user is 
considered to have consented to the privacy policy," Caltrider said.

Opting out of data collection is another concern.

Tesla, for example, appears to give users the choice between protecting their 
data or protecting their car. Its privacy policy does allow users to opt out of 
data collection but, as Mozilla points out, Tesla warns customers: "If you 
choose to opt out of vehicle data collection (with the exception of in-car Data 
Sharing preferences), we will not be able to know or notify you of issues 
applicable to your vehicle in real time. This may result in your vehicle 
suffering from reduced functionality, serious damage, or inoperability."

While technically this does give users a choice, it also essentially says if 
you opt out, "your car might become inoperable and not work," Caltrider said. 
"Well, that's not much of a choice." ®

Updated to add

After publication of this article Nissan, which was excoriated by Mozilla's 
report, issued the following update.

"Nissan takes privacy and data protection for our consumers and employees very 
seriously. When we do collect or share personal data, we comply with all 
applicable laws and provide the utmost transparency," it told The Register.

"Nissan’s Privacy Policy incorporates a broad definition of Personal 
Information and Sensitive Personal Information, as expressly listed in the 
growing patchwork of evolving state privacy laws, and is inclusive of types of 
data it may receive through incidental means."

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