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California's Stalking-Victim Law: Why Automakers' Sales Freeze Threat is Overblown

California's Stalking-Victim Law: Why Automakers' Sales Freeze Threat is Overblown
California car dealership showroom

Automakers warn a California law could halt new car sales July 1, but experts say the threat is exaggerated. The real dispute is over disabling vehicle tracking in existing cars.

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It wants the deadline pushed to July 1, 2027 for older vehicles and to 2031 for “all vehicles.”

On one hand, the industry has a point. Retrofitting millions of existing vehicles isn't as simple as pushing a software update.

Different vehicles use different hardware, software, telematics systems, and connected-service architectures. Adding new functionality without disrupting navigation, theft recovery, or other systems is a real engineering challenge.

Real Fight Is Over Tracking Existing Cars

The bill doesn't just push for a later deadline.

It also removes a protection that would indicate to someone inside the vehicle when someone outside accessed its connected services or vehicle location information.

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Automakers aren't exactly innocent bystanders here.

For years, they invested heavily in systems that collected location and vehicle data because those systems created value for the companies.

Privacy controls often lagged behind.

Now the industry argues that adding those controls retroactively is difficult because the systems were never designed with them in mind.

As for the threatened California sales freeze?

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Expect lawmakers, regulators, automakers, or some combination of all three to find a solution long before the state's dealerships start collecting dust.

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