"I never imagined that every trip, every turn, every time I press the gas, press the brake, that someone is looking over my ...
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has announced a new proposal that bans General Motors (GM) and its subscription-based services subsidiary, OnStar, from providing consumer reporting agencies ...
The company will also be forced to give customers more transparency about how GM and its OnStar connected car services collect and use data. “GM monitored and sold people’s precise geolocation ...
Under a proposed order to settle the allegations, GM and OnStar would be be banned for five years from disclosing users’ geolocation and driver-behavior data to consumer-reporting agencies ...
Under a proposed settlement, GM and OnStar will be banned for five years from sharing this information with consumer reporting agencies, marking the FTC’s first enforcement on connected vehicle ...
In the Federal Trade Commission’s (“FTC”) first action related to connected vehicle data, the agency announced that it reached a settlement ...
The FTC says GM and OnStar sold the data - which can be used to set insurance rates - from millions of vehicles. In a press release, the FTC says as part of a proposed order that would settle the ...
The agreement will be in force for 20 years, GM said. The proposed order would prohibit GM and OnStar from sharing such data to consumer reporting agencies for five years. Need a break? Play the USA ...