Apps that remotely track and control cars are being used by abusive partners to stalk and control their victims. The New York Times reports that car manufacturers have been slow to respond to this issue, according to victims and experts. The article highlights a case of a man tracking his wife's Mercedes, shedding light on the misuse of car tracking technology.
The effect shown here becomes even more dramatic if you make it active Hall of Famers per team. More teams, more stars, more players. Fewer Hall of Famers. https://t.co/2LrbwJ2uxP
The Truth is in There: Improving Reasoning in Language Models with Layer-Selective Rank Reduction Sharma et al.: https://t.co/SY5ieORZ7Z #ArtificialIntelligence #DeepLearning #MachineLearning https://t.co/orNUPNn9cE
“I realized, oh my God, that’s him tracking me." Apps that remotely track and control cars are being weaponized by abusive partners. Car manufacturers have been slow to respond, according to victims and experts. https://t.co/wdO9kMlCoD
This NYT article about abusers weaponizing Tesla’s tracking app is horrifying. Except the article isn’t about Tesla. It’s about a guy tracking his wife’s Mercedes. Tesla isn’t mentioned until the 24th paragraph, yet the front page shows a Model X. This is how the media lies. https://t.co/i1WQwSQKlU
Your car is tracking you. Abusive partners may be, too. #CarTracking #GPSTracking https://t.co/Aspt6gA7Ht