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Thursday, January 23, 2025

Commentary: Consumers Unaware Allstate Is Tracking Their Driving Behaviors

In our modern age of camera-equipped cellphones and laptops, ubiquitous social media websites, and constant GPS tracking that everyone seems to use to go anywhere, you are not paranoid if you worry that Big Brother—the government—along with companies like Google and Facebook, are recording your every move. If the allegations made by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton are true, you can add automobile insurance companies and a host of third-party app developers to that list.

6 comments:

  1. I have State Farm. I called to ask if I had enough coverage a year or so ago and the woman I dealt with wanted to know if I wanted to sign up for their driver monitoring program. They were offering a small discount as an inducement. My response was why would I want my insurance co to know every time I exceeded the speed limit and where I going every time I'm on the road. I'm driving an old model vehicle that doesn't broadcast the vehicle ID as it's out and about. It's probably the last vehicle I'll own.

    Nemo

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  2. I bet you Max Verstappen will have a hard time getting car insurance: speeding.

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  3. Just thinking. I drive a service vehicle along with other servicemen. Insurance will monitor the vehicle, my phone, the business phone along with other service men in the truck. I'll bet everyone will lose.

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  4. The only reliable way of not being monitored and tracked while you're rolling down the road is don't have car insurance.

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  5. Lesson on why one needs to be careful about what app you download onto your smartphone.

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  6. If anyone is unaware at this point, he's an idiot. Tolerate it, or not, but the secret is out.

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