this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
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Right to Repair
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Whether it be electronics, automobiles or medical equipment, the manufacturers should not be able to horde “oem” parts, render your stuff useless if you repair it with aftermarket parts, or hide schematics of their products.
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So if they're charging more for bad drivers, they'll charge less for good drivers, right?
If one company raises rates on bad drivers and uses the difference to offer lower rates to other drivers, they'll get more customers.
You should do stand-up, that was hilarious
It was downright adorable
I literally started typing "please don't reply if it's just some knee-jerk response" then decided it wasn't necessary. Yet here we are.
Thanks for the thoughtful reply. I guess that's essentially the hidden question in my original comment. "Is there enough healthy competition in the market that this will bring benefits to good drivers."
No and even if there was, algorithmic price fixing leads the way. There is no free market force in insurance
Why not? What anti-competitive mechanisms exist there?
You'd think wouldn't you!
The thing even some reporters who’re alarmed at this story like: usage-based insurance which does actually let people pay less if they’re provably safe. Safe, and/or low mileage. They also want drivers to be alerted when aggressive driving is detected to be given a chance to improve.
I think a program like that might be OK today for those who are very well informed about it. One day if every new car is web connected, I can imagine insurers trying to gouge anyone not in a driver monitoring program.
Such a privacy & liberty nightmare has a small silver lining I almost refuse to acknowledge: in a full-on Big Brother driving world, with human-expert-equivalent analysis of behavior, raging murderous drivers would certainly find it harder to do 100+ MPH with their lights off entering an active crosswalk while passing a schoolbus in the rain.
This turns out to be a bad thing. Enough people are uninformed or don't care about their privacy that over time an option that doesn't sell customer data loses customers and becomes more expensive and gets cancelled.