At least four car companies’ data collection and sharing practices are under investigation by the Texas attorney general’s office for potentially violating state law on deceptive trade practices, according to documents obtained by Recorded Future News.

Kia, General Motors, Subaru and Mitsubishi received “civil investigative demand” letters from the office’s consumer protection division in late April.

It’s the first known request for documents from connected car companies by a state investigative body as part of an enforcement review, experts say.

The California Privacy Protection Agency announced it would probe the data collection and sharing practices of connected-car companies and technologies in July, but the status of that inquiry is unknown.

  • @[email protected]
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    266 months ago

    Well, “agreeing with the Texas AG” was not on my list of expected things today. Or this month. Or this year. But here I am.

      • FuglyDuck
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        176 months ago

        they want the car companies to tell them when you go someplace naughty. like a gay bar or maybe an abortion clinic

    • @andrewta
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      36 months ago

      Yeah same here, but I’m glad to see they are starting to regulate this. It scares me the direction these companies are taking.

  • FuglyDuck
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    76 months ago

    “you will tell us if they go to an abortion clinic, right? … … …right?”

  • @[email protected]OP
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    56 months ago

    Sounds like some regulators may not be entirely onboard with the kind of cell-connected-car datasharing that we’ve been discussing recently.