By now, almost everybody with a
cellphone and a car knows that it's a bad idea to text while you're
driving. But people still do it,
and some of those people die in text-related car crashes and take innocent victims
with them. What if technology
existed that simply prevented people from texting from a moving car at
all? Wouldn't that solve the
problem?
Scott Tibbetts thought so. Tibbets and his company Katasi were
profiled in a recent New York Times
article for developing a promising technology that would simply block texting
from any phone that was in a moving car.
While there are several technological solutions to this problem that are
already on the market, they all have various problems.
Some text-blocking apps work by
using the phone's GPS to figure out if the phone is moving faster than walking
speed. If it is, the software
concludes that you're driving, and blocks texts. This one turns out to be a battery hog, because the GPS
system has to run all the time. It
also might present problems for train and bus passengers. Another system uses the car's speed
sensor and links it to the phone with a Bluetooth wireless connection. But it costs over a hundred bucks, and
there aren't that many people who are both concerned enough about texting while
driving to buy it, and also willing to shell out that much money for something
they could do for free with a little more willpower, perhaps.
Mr. Tibbetts' solution is
cleverer than these. It involves
connecting a wireless box to the car's OBD-II port—the on-board diagnostics
socket that the auto technicians use to figure out what the "service
engine" light means. When the
car's moving fast enough to be dangerous, the wireless box sends that information
to the cellphone network, which then asks the phone—once—where it is. Then, if the network is using the
software developed by Mr. Tibbetts' firm Katasi, the software uses the
location data to figure out things like who is driving the car. You don't want a whole family's text
service blocked just because Mom is driving to the grocery store, for
instance. That way, the GPS
battery-drain problem is minimized, and the computational heavy lifting is done
in the cloud, so to speak, rather than by the phone.
Mr. Tibbetts, an aerospace
engineer and entrepreneur, has persuaded both an insurance company and a
cellphone provider (Sprint) to cooperate in test trials, which have worked
fine. But it appears that the
largest player, Sprint, has gotten cold feet lately, and has stalled further
tests. In the Times interview, Wayne Ward,
vice-president for business and product development at Sprint, expressed
concerns about product liability.
Currently, if a driver texts while driving and gets in a wreck, it's the
driver's fault. Mr. Ward asks what
might happen if Sprint sells the Katasi system that claims to prevent such
accidents, and then some glitch happens and somebody sneaks through a text and
crashes anyway? Why, Sprint could
be sued!
Pardon me, but it appears that
there's more going on here than meets the eye. Any time a small independent company comes up to a big firm
and offers the big guy new technology, the not-invented-here problem can raise
its ugly head. Short of buying the
small upstart outright (which happens a lot, by the way), if the big firm adapts
the small company's technology, they will be on the hook for royalty payments
or other forms of obligation that big companies don't want to be tied down
to. And there's also the simple
pride factor expressed by the phrase "not invented here"—if we didn't
think of it first, it can't be that good.
Besides, it's not clear who would
make enough money to offset the expenses of the added hardware and software—and
lawyers' fees, if Mr. Ward's fears turned out to be correct. The existing GPS-based solutions for
text blocking in cars aren't exactly selling like hotcakes, even after all but
five states have adopted no-texting-while-driving laws of one form or
another.
One could imagine a legal
solution: make something like the
Katasi text-blocking system mandatory by government fiat. Nobody has seriously put forward that
idea yet. But it might
happen. There was a time when
ordinary window glass was used in automobiles, with the result that otherwise
minor wrecks turned deadly when razor-sharp knives of glass flew around and
sliced—well, enough said. But when
the technology of laminating glass with a plastic inner layer was developed
around 1920 to keep the shattered pieces together, auto companies adopted it,
partly motivated by fear of lawsuits.
Eventually, most countries made it a legal requirement for all glass in automobiles to
be laminated or safety glass, but it looks like the firms were ahead of the
government in that case.
Safety glass is a different kind
of thing than automatic text-blocking.
An auto company could start using safety glass and just raise the car's price
incrementally, and hardly any customers would notice the change. But as soon as you stop a person from
doing something that they're used to doing, like texting while driving, you
create a sharp negative impression.
And that's something that cellphone providers are reluctant to do as
long as there are competitors ready to take business away.
My hat is off to Mr. Tibbetts,
who put five years and millions of dollars into developing a clever technological
fix for a significant problem. But as
many engineers turned entrepreneurs have learned, building the better mousetrap—or
text trap—is only part of the problem.
Convincing people to buy it and use it is often harder than coming up
with the invention itself. If
everybody used something like the Katasi system on their cellphones, we would
all be safer, no question about that.
We would also lose a little freedom of judgment which we can now
exercise, which is whether to text while driving. Perhaps some telecomm industry leaders will get together and
agree to adopt Katasi, or something like it, but such inter-company cooperation
for a non-financial thing like safety is a rarity. It could happen, though. I bet Mr. Tibbetts, for one, hopes that it will.
Sources: The New
York Times article "Trying to Hit the Brake on Texting While
Driving" by Matt Richtel, appeared in the online edition on Sept. 13, 2014
at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/business/trying-to-hit-the-brake-on-texting-while-driving.html. I also referred to Wikipedia articles
on on-board diagnostics, windshields, and safety glass.
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