Call Us 813-960-5225 ☰ ˟
Call Us: 813-960-5225
Logo
  • Home
  • Get A Quote
    • Automobile
    • Business & CommercialImage of right arrow
      • Commercial Auto Insurance Quote
      • General Liability Quote Form
      • Business Owners (BOP) Quote Form
      • Builders Risk
      • Liquor Liability Quote Form
      • Workers Compensation Quote
      • Contractors Liability Quote
      • Realtor Errors & Omissions
    • Church
    • Condominium
    • Flood
    • HomeownersImage of right arrow
      • Rental Houses Insurance Quote
      • Vacant Homes Insurance Quote
      • Homeowners Insurance Quote
    • Motorcycle
    • Recreational Vehicle
    • Renters
    • Umbrella
    • Watercraft & BoatImage of right arrow
      • Watercraft Insurance Quote
      • Jet Ski Insurance Quote
  • Customer Service
    • AutomobileImage of right arrow
      • Request ID Card for Auto Policy
      • Add Vehicle to Existing Auto Policy
      • Remove Vehicle from Existing Auto Policy
      • Add Driver to Existing Auto Policy
      • Remove Driver from Existing Auto Policy
    • Business & CommercialImage of right arrow
      • Request ID Card for Commercial Auto Policy
      • Add Vehicle to Existing Commercial Auto Policy
      • Remove Vehicle from Existing Commercial Auto Policy
      • Add Driver to Existing Commercial Auto Policy
      • Remove Driver from Existing Commercial Auto Policy
      • Request General Liability Certificate of Insurance
    • InsuranceImage of right arrow
      • Request Evidence of Insurance
      • Policy Review Request
    • MotorcycleImage of right arrow
      • Request ID Card for Motorcycle Policy
      • Add Motorcycle to Existing Policy
      • Remove Motorcycle from Existing Policy
      • Add Driver to Existing Motorcycle Policy
      • Remove Driver from Existing Motorcycle Policy
    • Recreational VehicleImage of right arrow
      • Request ID Card for Recreational Vehicle Policy
      • Add Recreational Vehicle to Existing Policy
      • Remove Recreational Vehicle from Existing Policy
      • Add Driver to Existing Recreational Vehicle Policy
      • Remove Driver from Existing Recreational Vehicle Policy
    • Watercraft & BoatImage of right arrow
      • Request ID Card for Watercraft Policy
      • Add Watercraft to Existing Policy
      • Remove Watercraft from Existing Policy
      • Change Primary Operator on Existing Watercraft Policy
  • Blog
  • Make a Payment
  • Resources
    • Refer a Friend
    • Important Links
    • Free Reports
    • Insurance Glossary
  • About Us
    • About Northside Insurance Agency, Inc.
    • Location Map
    • Employee Directory
    • Customer Testimonials
    • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Join Our Newsletter
Home > Blog > Is Your Car Insurer Monitoring Your Heart Rate?
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 2015

Is Your Car Insurer Monitoring Your Heart Rate?

PicAttention tailgaters: Someday a bank or a potential employer considering your loan or your job application might become privy to your tendencies for aggressive driving.

Northbrook-based Allstate, which last month floated the idea of one day selling the information it collects from policyholders' connected cars, was issued a patent earlier this month for a driving-behavior database that it said might be useful for health insurers, lenders, credit-rating agencies, marketers and potential employers.

Allstate's patent also said the invention has the potential to evaluate drivers' physiological data, including heart rate, blood pressure and electrocardiogram signals, which could be recorded from steering wheel sensors.

"George Orwell wrote this, right?" Bob Hunter, insurance director for Consumer Federation of America and a former Texas insurance commissioner, said after reviewing the patent, which he called "astonishing." Orwell is the author of "1984," a novel about people being monitored by Big Brother government.

"Why should Allstate know that a person has, say, atrial fibrillation?" Hunter said, noting that consumers might want to consider getting driving gloves.

Allstate's patent acknowledged that use of the data might be subject to terms of agreement with the operator of the vehicle.

In recent years, Allstate and other car insurers have introduced voluntary programs in which policyholders can have their driving monitored, typically through a device or a mobile app, in exchange for potential discounts. Instances of hard braking or of driving at night, for example, might lessen one's chance of a discount. Initially, the insurers assured customers that the programs didn't track location, which was of particular concern for privacy advocates and consumers.

The tenor has changed, however. Starting last year, some insurers' "usage-based" or "telematics" programs -- including those of Allstate and Progressive -- evolved to begin gathering once-taboo locations.

Allstate's patent also reflects the potential to use, mine and monetize Big Data. When Allstate last month mentioned it might sell policyholders' driving data, it held up Google as Exhibit A.

"There are a lot of people monetizing data today," Allstate Chief Executive Tom Wilson said at a conference. Searching on Google, for example, "seems like it's free, but it's not free," he said. "You're giving them your information, and they sell your information."

Wilson then raised the question of whether Allstate could or should "sell this information we get from people driving around to various people and capture some additional profit and, perhaps, give a better value proposition to our customers that we're not giving today?"

Allstate on Thursday pointed out that its patent for a "motor vehicle operating data collection and analysis" system was filed in 2013 and that related patents date to 2005. The timing between Wilson's comments last month and the June 9, 2015, stamping of the patent at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office was "coincidental," the company said.

"This is simply a continuation of a patent we've held for some time," Allstate spokesman Justin Herndon said Thursday. "Allstate is very proactive about managing its intellectual property rights to fully leverage innovation on behalf of our customers and ensure the best customer experience possible."

Most of the Allstate patent provides more detail on the company's potential vision for developing driver safety ratings based on such factors as vehicle speed, acceleration and adherence to stop signs. For example, operation of the vehicle without headlights and changes in vehicle direction without turn signals might be recorded.

Also, frequent changes in vehicle speed and braking might suggest aggressive driving like tailgating slower-moving cars, the patent said.

The recorded data could help the vehicle owner monitor the use of the vehicle by everyone from employees to family members, the patent said.

Drivers will be helped by getting feedback, Allstate said in its patent.

Others might also find the data useful, the company said.

"The recorded data may also provide an objective behavioral data collection system for third parties, e.g., health insurance companies, lending institutions, credit-rating companies, product and service marketing companies, potential employers, to evaluate an individual's behavioral characteristics in a real-life and commonly experienced situation, i.e., driving a motor vehicle," the patent said.

Changes in an individual driver's "profile" may suggest a change in lifestyle or employment, Allstate said in its patent.

"A pattern of aggressive driving may be correlated to 'risk taking' in other life or employment environments, including but not limited to spending and debt repayment," Allstate said in its patent.

An individual who is both a "prudent" driver and a "prudent" user of credit might be "part of an ideal target market of certain goods or services," it said.

Collecting, analyzing and sharing data on drivers would have precedent.

Speakers at insurance telematics conferences in Chicago in recent years have discussed the potential for a driver rating system similar to that used for credit scores, which are influenced by making payments on time.

Allstate's patent said other existing patents or patent applications "ignore the profound behavioral characteristics exhibited by drivers in operating motor vehicles, e.g. aggressiveness or patience, caution or recklessness, compliance with laws, etc."

"These characteristics are relevant to each individual's behavior in other situations, including performance of job duties, behavior in stress, and meeting obligations to others," the patent said. Allstate envisions the information being "uploaded to a central server to create a comprehensive database" that will "provide a useful service to society."

The patent also leaves open the possibility of recording data from cameras that are onboard, as well as any "driver physiological monitoring systems." The patent specifically mentioned "the recording and evaluation of driver physiological data, such as heart rate, electrocardiograph signals and blood pressure." For example, the patent said, electrocardiograph signals can be recorded from steering wheels with built-in sensors.

The patent gave little insight into how the physiological data would be used.

The invention, the patent said, would ideally collect data every two seconds.

Frederick Lane, a lawyer and author of "American Privacy: The 400-Year History of Our Most Contested Right," said Allstate's patent "covers the waterfront in terms of not just data collection but data integration," including marrying car-specific data to public databases of speed limits.

"It opens some disturbing possibilities," Lane said, noting that it reminds him of what municipalities are trying to do with red light cameras. "Will your car start snitching on you?"

The phrase "predictive modeling of future behavior" used in the Allstate patent also concerned Lane.

"It's well and good to collect data, but the question is what do you do with the data?" Lane said.

Among the questions raised by Lane: Might drivers who are found to exceed speed limits be charged more by rental companies? Might police departments be a potential buyer of the data?

The data could be recorded or transferred in many ways, including flash memory cards or through wireless technology. That data can then be transferred to another device, including a microprocessor linked to an Internet server, the patent said.

For more information about Tampa car insurance rates, give Northside Insurance Agency a call at 813-960-5225 today!

(Source:insurancenewsnet.com)
Posted 5:37 PM

Tags: tampa car insurance rates, auto insurance
Share |


No Comments


Post a Comment
Required
Required (Not Displayed)
Required


All comments are moderated and stripped of HTML.

NOTICE: This blog and website are made available by the publisher for educational and informational purposes only. It is not be used as a substitute for competent insurance, legal, or tax advice from a licensed professional in your state. By using this blog site you understand that there is no broker client relationship between you and the blog and website publisher.
Blog Archive
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018
  • 2017
  • 2016
  • 2015
  • 2014

  • fr44 insurance(13)
  • fr44 insurance florida(12)
  • progressive fr44(11)
  • fr44 insurance without vehicle(10)
  • fr44 insurance florida progressive(8)
  • how long is fr44 required in florida(8)
  • fr44(8)
  • fr44 insurance florida non owners(8)
  • flood insurance(7)
  • insurance(6)
  • how much is fr44 insurance in florida(6)
  • florida(6)
  • tampa(5)
  • how much is fr44 insurance in florida?(5)
  • how much does it cost for fr44 insurance(5)
  • fr44 insurance florida requirements(5)
  • auto insurance(5)
  • how long do you have to have fr44 insurance in florida?(5)
  • fr44 insurance in florida(4)
  • fr44 florida requirements(4)
  • what is an fr44 in florida(4)
  • fr44 insurance quotes florida(4)
  • tampa flood insurance(4)
  • how much does it cost for fr44 insurance?(4)
  • florida non owners(4)
  • the insurance fr44(3)
  • tampa insurance(3)
  • insurance fr44(3)
  • hillsborough county homeowners insurance(3)
  • what does fr44 insurance cover?(3)
  • hurricane preparedness 2018(3)
  • dui insurance florida(3)
  • why do i need sr22 insurance in florida(3)
  • homeowners insurance florida(3)
  • how much is fr44 insurance in florida a month?(3)
  • how long do you have to have fr44 insurance in florida(3)
  • florida monthly payments(3)
  • dui florida(3)
  • general insurance fr44(3)
  • what supplies should i have for a hurricane?(2)
  • hurricane preparedness week(2)
  • tampa renters insurance(2)
  • i can't afford fr44 insurance(2)
  • who has the cheapest non owner fr44 insurance in florida?(2)
  • orlando(2)
  • hurricane preparedness brochure(2)
  • how much does it cost to add and fr44 to your insurance(2)
  • fr44 insurance fl(2)
  • fr44 florida monthly payments(2)
  • business insurance(2)

View Mobile Version
Logo
Quick Links
Home Our Products About Us
Our Carriers Blog Contact Us
Location
14009 North Dale Mabry Highway
Tampa, FL 33618

P: 813-960-5225
F: 813-968-8478
info@northsideinsuranceagency.com
Social Social Social
© Copyright. All rights reserved.
Powered by Insurance Website Builder