ZenicaNC
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2024
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 45
- Reaction score
- 9
- Location
- NC
- Vehicles
- 2016 Cayenne S E-Hybrid

My life is probably very boring as well, you certainly won't find paparazzi chasing me down to post my speedo pics or to body shame me! (just kidding, no speedos here, sorry for any imagery that may have popped into your head) but I still don't want it collated with a million other people to form the basis of statistical data which proves useful to a hostile foreign government.@ZenicaNC
I agree with your other points of principle, but I wouldn’t be bothered about any authority eavesdropping on my boring life!
Regardless of likelihood, commands affecting operation sent to the vehicle should any hostilities break out would have the biggest impact!
But any party with enough motivation, knowledge and wherewithal could do that to any connected car?
If my own government is doing it, which I am sure they are just to a lesser degree, I can only hope it is done for the betterment of this country and by extension, each of us in this country. Certainly not to the betterment of iran, nk or china.
I have made the same assumption for years. Without resorting to living without modern conveniences and becoming a troglodyte, I just accept certain inalienable truths, prices will rise, politicians will philander and you too will grow old. haha, just kidding. The song popped into my head. I have a (possibly false sense) of security in believing that some of the more established US tech companies that develop and deign in the US but manufacture overseas do so in a way to mitigate most forms of intrusion or at a minimum, be able o detect it. As was the case in recent years with a cell phone manufactured in china. A 3rd party cyber security firm found how the factory added hidden spyware. In the case of some, like Apple, I think it is beyond the ability of the manufacturing partners to add malicious code into the original code in a way that Apple wouldn't be able to detect. I've had product manufactured overseas, both Asia and the EU. All software was packed into a proprietary compression which could only be mounted and loaded by the writer I supplied. IF they added or changed the code, I could read one and see that additions were made. In terms of manufacturing, I'm a pimple on a ticks ass compared to Apple, Microsoft or Google. I've no doubt they would at least be aware of the incursion. Whether or not they did anything about it is another issue entirely.Paranoia is not a bad thing to have. However, if you think those same Chinese companies have not compromised non-Chinese manufacturers, you'd be letting your guard down and having a major blind spot.
Yes, I make the same assumptions, I just draw the line between the evil of the US government and the evil of the chinese government. One I can live with. While I cannot eliminate every possible area where they may have compromised my personal (online) security, I do try to avoid things that seem like I'd just be surrendering. ie, that pet robot or a car from byd.I work in cyber-security, I pretty much assume all my devices, phones, computers, cars, have back doors or hidden unpatched vulnerabilities known by 2 or 3 state actors (one of them is probably my own government), which can be used should they choose to do so. If you don't want to be spied on, you gotta get off the grid, no connected devices of any kind (including cars).
I can't speak to that, never having been in a chinese car. As for tik tok, I avoid that like I would The Night King. Frankly, I like YT Shorts. Of the few tik tok videos I have seen on other peoples devices, they seem no different. At its core, we're talking about a <60 second video of someone doing whatever they can to get clicks. How much of the algorithm is critical in this? As for "recommendations", I pay zero attention to those rabbit holes. It's like eavesdropping on a spicy conversation and finding it more enthralling than the one taking place in front of you. Pure distraction.As for Chinese copying, sure, they used to, but I gotta tell you, they now have better automotive technology than most western automakers, so who are they copying from, space aliens? They have in fact advanced beyond the western tech in a few fields. Why do you think TikTok is so much more successful than youtube shorts? Better algorithms. Trump tried forcing them to sell the algorithms to US company (his buddy Larry), but Tik Tok just moves all the algorithms to China. Today, if US was to simply take over TikTok's US offices, they wouldn't get much tech from it. Chinese cars are more reliable than traditional automakers too, so who exactly did they copy that reliability tech from?
I care about copying because A) to support it means you supported a cheat and a thief and B) it isn't the same thing as competition born from innovation.I never understood the argument about copying.
Why should the end-customer care who copies who? For all I care, copy whoever you want, as long as I get the best product. This is the same tribalistic childish argument that IOS/Android users keep having: :"IOS copied from android, no android copied from IOS this first" Blah blah blah
What I actually wanted to add: BYD came out with their "Active Ride" alternative before Porsche did. So who copied who? Might have something to do with BYD hiring key talent from Porsche, sure, but they still released it first.
And on the tracking / security topic, do people not know even app makers can generate exact 3d model of your space and track movements in it, simply based on wi-fi signal data, baked into any app as basic access? IOS is a tad better, because they make apps ask you: " any app that wants to interact with devices on your network must ask for permission the first time that it tries to browse your local network ". It's not even new technology:
So what, are you not gonna use any app or wifi anymore? People need to chill... You've been "compromised" long long ago.
Yes, I am aware that the host of sensors and data my phone collects can be used by apps to generate all sorts of information. Walking around with a camera and microphone on my wrist and in my pocket collecting data on my every move. I can't stop that. What I can do is look to see what permissions an app is seeking and then decide if I want to grant it. I skip many popular apps and even some useful ones because an app that lets me identify a plant from a picture doesn't need to know who my contacts are or see my purchase history.
I just do it the olde fashioned way, I contact the botany dept at my local university and ask them!
We each can only live by our own set of rules and values, for me, it would mean never driving a chinese car. As for the topic at hand, I doubt a venerable company like Porsche will be supplanted by byd, look at the Hyundai Genesis for example. An amazing car. Chock full of the same tech as its German rivals yet it didn't stop BMW from producing the 7 series. Mercedes didn't shutter Mayback or even the S class. Porsche will need to pivot and adapt for sure, but "be in trouble"? No. That is just doom&gloom mongering. (probably by actors working on behalf of byd!) lol