"“It’s not just about the one time you park, it’s about every time you park,” said Jen King, the Director of Consumer Privacy at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society. “It enables the abilities for the company -- and potentially law enforcement if they request it through the company -- to build a dossier on every place that you park. Some people won’t care about that. Other people will find that extremely sensitive.”
“I understand the desire to get away from the infrastructure part of it, but there’s a real concern here that not everyone has cell phones, not everyone has credit cards, not everyone really has a debit card or a bank account,” said King. “Forcing people into a cashless society when you don’t have the resources to be cashless seems implicitly unfair.”"
- Date Published:07/25/2018
- Original Publication:WLRN Miami