Yet another case of just because you can…

  • @[email protected]
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    91 hour ago

    If you thought digital licence plates were a good idea I have a digital bridge to sell you

  • Optional
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    144 hours ago

    Yes one digital license plate please! Also scan my fucking face so I can by a 300 dollar concert ticket you assholes!

  • @grue
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    225 hours ago

    Digital license plate

    I understand the words, but the phrase makes no fucking sense whatsoever.

    • @[email protected]
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      104 hours ago

      Seriously. I see exactly one use case, and that’s for criminals of one sort or another to mask their identity during the commission of a crime. It’s not like law abiding citizens are able to use them to protect their privacy in any way.

      It’s not like digital IDs, where it’s one less thing to carry and potentially more secure. Your plate or this plate are fixed to your car the same way, both are (legally) static, and the only thing that changes is the ease of faking your plate.

    • sylver_dragon
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      125 hours ago

      Reviver’s $29.99 monthly subscription fee.

      Someone, somewhere is making money on these and probably providing kickbacks campaign contributions to get laws passed to allow this sort of stupid.

  • @Treczoks
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    54 hours ago

    “this scenario is highly unlikely to occur in real-world conditions, limiting it to individual bad actors knowingly violating laws and product warranties.”

    From reading this article, it looks like they just accessed the JTAG or SWDIO connector and simply wrote a new software on that thingy. If they were stupid enough to expose this kind of connector, they probably were dumb enough not even to secure it against reading, so one could probably just reverse engineer. I think I could easily do that if I had access to such a thing and would set my mind to it. It is not different from what I do every day for a job - programming such embedded devices.

    I’ve been in places where people with this kind of knowledge meet by the thousands. I would not call this “highly unlikely”.

  • @[email protected]
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    558 hours ago

    A subscription fee for a fucking license plate? We already have that, it’s called registration.

  • @Roopappy
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    55 hours ago

    Where I live, I see tons of cars every day with fake, missing, invalid, and foreign license plates every day. Enforcement would require cops to get out of their cars and expend effort over an administrative violation, so nothing happens.

    These plates are “illegal”? Meh.

    • @[email protected]
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      95 hours ago

      Where I live, a shockingly high percentage of the fake, invalid, obscured license plates are the cops themselves.

  • @helpImTrappedOnline
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    367 hours ago

    That’s the only reason I can think you’d want a digital license plate, to change it on demand.

    Its just e-waste.

    • @CaptainSpaceman
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      125 hours ago

      If it can malfunction, it can be replaced.

      Replacement costs money.

      The spice must flow.

    • sylver_dragon
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      54 hours ago

      It’s right there in the article:

      Reviver’s $29.99 monthly subscription fee.

      What, you thought this was supposed to help the customer?

  • @[email protected]
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    178 hours ago

    Imagine a digital plate being a vulnerability. I’m shocked.

    You can also 3D print a regular plate, but at least that doesn’t change on demand.

  • @yesman
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    03 hours ago

    Everything that disrupts surveillance is good. People concerned with the “fairness” of tolls and tickets, or that a criminal might benefit are just grown-ass hall-monitors and it’s pathetic.

    • @XeroxCool
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      72 hours ago

      I disagree on this case. Disrupting surveillance blending unpaid tolls into society is one thing, but this doubles as identity theft with the burden placed on one innocent individual. It’s not victimless in the sense a thief makes off with a few dollars saved like an obscured plate, it puts the accusation on a specific different person. They then have the legal trouble to deal with individually. This is something that should be as secure as a standard physical plate (which isn’t truly that secure at all).

      • @Revonult
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        22 hours ago

        Yeah, it would be like committing crimes while fooling facial recognition to identify you as a random innocent person instead of just identifying no one.

        I guess in the long run it could erode confidence in the system (I know it already misidentifies people regularly) but in the short term, innocents would suffer.

      • @GamingChairModel
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        12 hours ago

        Yeah, there have been cases of people dealing with the bureaucratic nightmare that followed when they got vanity license plates that said “NULL” and a bunch of bad program logic combined with incomplete data in the databases to send them a bunch of tickets.

        Making it so that people can take advantage of even more complex computer errors could ruin things for other people.

  • @werefreeatlast
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    15 hours ago

    Why even look at the numbers at all? Just make it a meshtastic thing that you hook up to the car’s battery. Or maybe a AAA battery thing that is solar powdered and you stick it to your windshield.