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Remote Breathalyzer

Foredecker writes: "I couldn't believe my eyes when I read an EE Times article about about remote breathalyzer technology developed by TCU. This device is apparently intended for installation in new cars. In essence, it is a sensor in your car which would signal any nearby police if you had been drinking."

518 comments

  1. Excuse me but... by analog-1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wouldn't it make just a little more *sense* for the sensor to disable the ignition or something?

    Or do we just want our prisons to be that much overpopulated?

    1. Re:Excuse me but... by eXtro · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it would, but neither police departments or insurance would like this. Both of them make staggering profits from actually pulling people over who've broken the law. If people are prevented from breaking the law then they lose that source of income. What's a few lost lives compared to the tragic loss of money for cops and insurance companies?

    2. Re:Excuse me but... by Kronus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Feeling cynical this morning? Insurance companies would love this gizmo. After all, they make money when you don't get in an accident. If your car never started they'd be in seventh heaven. And as for the cops, do they actually make any money when they pull people over? Whenver I've gotten a ticket, I've had to make the check out to the town, not the police department.

    3. Re:Excuse me but... by Fredge · · Score: 1
      And as for the cops, do they actually make any money when they pull people over? Whenver I've gotten a ticket, I've had to make the check out to the town, not the police department.

      Yes, but a portion of the money tickets generate for the city goes back to the police in the form of equipment and gadgets for the police.
    4. Re:Excuse me but... by Kenneth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wouldn't it make just a little more *sense* for the sensor to disable the ignition or something?

      Not really. I don't particular like this either, but disabling the ignition would make such things as designated drivers impossible as it would disable the ignition if SOMEONE ELSE in the car had been drinking as well.

      --
      There is a civil war coming in the United States. Remember which side has most of the guns
    5. Re:Excuse me but... by eXtro · · Score: 1
      First of all, insurance payouts aren't free. The insurance companies will on average get their money back. They do this by increasing your rates. I've never had an accident, but from what I understand they normally get back more than they gave out. Nothing wrong here, people should pay for their mistakes.


      Second of all, there is huge money involved with people who are ticketed and fined. Get a ticket and your insurance rate goes up. There's no payout involved so this is pure profit for the insurance company.


      Third, the town itself does collect the money, or more accurately the "billing department" for the town does the collection. The money then gets circulated around, a little bit for the town, a little bit for the cops and (usually) zero for public safety. In your version of the world I suppose that the town wouldn't even see any of the money, just the deparment in charge of accounts receivable, after all you don't write seperate checks for the police force, local government etc.

    6. Re:Excuse me but... by Hogbert · · Score: 1

      Excuse me too, but...

      Disabling the car ain't such a good idea e.g. in the following scenario:
      Me and my buddies are in the summer cottage in the middle of .... nowhere sipping happily moonshine.

      Someone hits his foot with an axe while trying to cut wood into sauna stove and starts to bleed heavily.

      Obvious solution: Use mobile phone to call up the ambulance ? Great, but if that is not a feasible solution for some reason or another, the wounded HAS to be taken to hospital.

      Which is worse:
      1) With the car disabled, my buddy bleeds to death ?
      2) Carefully drive the minimun possible distance to reach medical facilities with buddy on the back seat ?

      I know that I would choose "2".

      --
      Microserf: 18.5% slashdot corrupt
    7. Re:Excuse me but... by Modeflip · · Score: 0

      Yes... that would make too much sense..

    8. Re:Excuse me but... by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok, so i'm DD, and i STILL get pulled over b/c someone else in the car was drinking? Somehow i don't see how that would fly.

    9. Re:Excuse me but... by jeff_bond · · Score: 1

      No it wouldn't make sense. What if the driver is sober, but he is transporting his drunken friends home from the pub?

      Jeff

      --
      stty erase ^H
    10. Re:Excuse me but... by RacerX69 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what would the car do if you are driving on the freeway at 65 mph and you spill your drink?

      Hmmmm... oh, wait....

    11. Re:Excuse me but... by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      disabling the ignition would make such things as designated drivers impossible as it would disable the ignition if SOMEONE ELSE in the car had been drinking as well.

      The article was ./'d so I couldn't check the details for myself, but that must be a pretty sensitive device to pick up the BAC of the passenger who doesn't blow. IIRC, some states have already installed breathalyzers in the cars of certain habitual DUI offenders. The device functions in tandem with the ignition - the driver must blow 0.0 for the car to start.

      Although, by your logic, instead of the driver not being able to start the car because of a drunken passenger, he will now be pulled over. That doesn't sound like a more appealing alternative than a disabled ignition to me.

    12. Re:Excuse me but... by deathscythe257 · · Score: 1

      heh. here in kentucky (yah i know) they recently passed a law prohibiting people from driving with drunk people in their cars. Hence, no DD's. Pretty much bullshit, but now you can get in as much trouble trying to keep your friends safe as you would being reckless. so, these things will probably be the first thing to go in cars in KY from now on.

    13. Re:Excuse me but... by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      or

      3) While "carefully" weaving your way into town, you drive head-on into my car and kill us all.

      How about one of you stays sober at any given time while you're away from ambulances and phones? Could be a strain, but you could work in shifts. As an added bonus, the sober one might have intervened when your buddy picked up the ax, instead of giggling with the rest of you.

      I like a beer in the evening, but I have a simple rule: "I was drunk" is never an excuse for anything.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    14. Re:Excuse me but... by sallen · · Score: 1
      No it wouldn't make sense. What if the driver is sober, but he is transporting his drunken friends home from the pub?


      Absolutely. It would cause every 'designated driver' to be 'suspected' of dui. The determination of probable cause must be the driver, not just an occupant. IANAL, (and though I did take law courses in school, most were only international law with a couple criminal... I still can't remember which is which when it comes to Miranda and Escabido), I DO seem to remember a 5th Amendment which might come back to haunt.

    15. Re:Excuse me but... by jeffy124 · · Score: 2

      you'll get pulled over, but would be excused because you (the driver) are found to be sober and the passenger would be drunk off his ---. Or you may not be pulled over at all, as the cop would notice your driving does not show the normal signs of the driver being drunk, like going very slow, swerving, etc. The cop in that situation would keep himself available for watching for people who are swerving and other real dangers instead of being on the side of the road with an ok driver.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    16. Re:Excuse me but... by sparty · · Score: 1

      That is actually a possibility. In some states (including Montana IIRC), it's entirely legal to have an open container in the vehicle so long as your BAC is in the legal range.

    17. Re:Excuse me but... by RacerX69 · · Score: 1

      But having the car shut off in the middle of the highway might be a bad thing, if automatic kill switches were implemented as the previous poster suggested.

    18. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already did this in Canada(I'm from the US) with repeat offenders. If you were a repeat offender, you could get out of jail earlier if you agreed to have a device that would prompt you to breath into it at random times. If you didn't blow into it or if you were over the limit, you have x amount of minutes to pull over before it killed your engine. It would also not start unless you used the device and passed it. I think this is a good thing, all you have to do is not drive drunk which millions of people have no problem complying with every day. I guess you have to have someone killed by a drunk driver to think driving drunk is a bad thing.

    19. Re:Excuse me but... by CokeBear · · Score: 1

      Of course government wants prisons to be overpopulated! Prisons are a big business, and anything that helps a business helps the economy!
      (Also, check and see how many private prison companies contributed to political parties last election. You will be shocked)

      --
      Reality has a liberal bias
    20. Re:Excuse me but... by saldaec · · Score: 1

      Here in Canada they also use this device on first time offenders. A first time offence gets you a one year suspension. However, if you agree to have one of these devices installed in your vehicle, you can start driving again after 3 months.

    21. Re:Excuse me but... by lcypher · · Score: 1

      They are called 'blow n gos' down here is Texas.

      Anyhow, I had the same concern that others who had been drinking in the car would set off the sensor. The article explained that the sensor would only work in a small area. And by placing the sensors strategically around the driver's seat, they only pick up the driver's 'emissions'.

      I still disagree with the whole concept. If you have been convicted of DD, then whatever punishment that they give you is probably warranted. Having a homing beacon for cops in your car is not.

    22. Re:Excuse me but... by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

      Not in all municipalities. Many municipalities put all of the proceeds into a general account and forbid the consideration of those monies when determining the police department's budget.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    23. Re:Excuse me but... by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

      Except, there is an even greater loss to the insurance company if there are no police in the immediate area, and the driver manages to kill someone.

      No, insurance companies would better off mandating that these sensors prohibit the car from starting in the first place.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    24. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i agree about the warranted punishment. also about unwarranted homing beacons. i think that if someone in the back seat(behind the driver) they would have to puke in the car to set the thing off, due to the fact that it only works in the small area.

    25. Re:Excuse me but... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I shouldn't be pulled over at all. That was my point..

    26. Re:Excuse me but... by rbruels · · Score: 1

      The only solution, of course, is to use another method of stopping the drunk driver. When the ethyl vapors are detected by the fuel cell system, the car would violently detonate, vaporizing the occupant and spreading debris over a quarter-mile.

      Why? Because that would be awesome.

      Ryan

      --

      "All your base are belong to this file I send in order to have your advice."
    27. Re:Excuse me but... by ChickenMaster · · Score: 1
      Many officers have a quota of tickets they need to give out each month. So, in a way, yes the officer does get paid for giving you a ticket.


      This has a lot of weight on how an officer decides to be unusally leneant to strict. If they're trying to meet their quote, they'd be willing to give you a ticket for the silliest things that any judge would throw out. (like 2mph over the speed limit)

      --
      To conquer death, you only have to die
    28. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its jail, not prison. You don't get thrown in prison for being drunk.

    29. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats bullshit

      Its up to the cops own discretion whether or not to arrest you for 'being drunk' and this tool would be just the perfect cause for nabing as many drunk drivers as they wanted

      They don't have to have any valid proof, they just have to think you've been drinking.

      I've been arrested for Public Intox. while riding in a car, and even though I blew a .02 once I got to the police station, they still arrested me!

    30. Re:Excuse me but... by Hogbert · · Score: 1

      Yes, sure.

      I understand your points and am not into drunken driving. My GFs father was killed by drunken driver several years ago.

      What is not important is not the exact case that I just described. What is important that: Who takes the responsibility to disallow the vehicle to move?

      Does "the car" know better than the potential driver? Does "the car" know how important it is to be able to drive ?

      If I can't get my buddy (or victim of some other accident) to hospital and he/she dies, who is to take responsibility ? Technology or human ?

      I vote for human.

      As much as I am against the BigBrother society, "calling the cops" is more humane thing to do compared to "killing the car temporarily". Luckily these are not the only two options.

      --
      Microserf: 18.5% slashdot corrupt
    31. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wire cutters + Soldering Iron + Various Electrical Components = Problem Solved.

    32. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice troll. They're not allowed to *drink* in your car, but they can be as drunk, stoned or ill as they want.

    33. Re:Excuse me but... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1
      I find this very easy to believe. Having been a victim of the USA's "drunk" driving laws, I know firsthand that a lot of people get paid when a driver is charged with DUI. The state gets a payoff immediately, then other organizations (like the Catholic church) recieve donations which are forcibly extracted from the hapless driver..

      And when the legal limit is .08, you don't have to be drunk to get arrested. All that is necessary is that you are "under the influence", which is a pretty vague term in reality. Sure, drunk driving is a terrible thing, but the State's profit margin is great.

      As far as this type of thing goes, why stop with devices to detect alchol? Lets put in smoke detectors so we can catch those pot smokers, sound detectors that will alert the police when Rap music is played. Hell, just install hidden cameras and mics in our houses in case someone's politics are not in line with the current regime. Excuse me, I think I hear boots marching..

      Fuzzy

    34. Re:Excuse me but... by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      My problem is that the judgement of drunks is notoriously bad. "I thought I could drive OK" has to be among the most common dying declarations.

      I'd want the breathalyzer set pretty high, of course, but if you're seeing double your buddy might have a better chance waiting with a tourniquet than on the road with a panicked drunk driving the car.

      Bottom line is that drunk drivers are killing Americans faster than the Vetnam war, and most of us have run out of patience. We could allow roadside executions, but this machine might be better.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    35. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >They are called 'blow n gos' down here is Texas.

      Who's to say you really have to blow into them? Fans, pre-inflated baloons, etc.....

    36. Re:Excuse me but... by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      Nope. They make more money when you get pulled over for DUI, then they raise your rates. If you get in an accident while driving drunk, I doubt your insurance would cover it, anyway.

    37. Re:Excuse me but... by joshsisk · · Score: 1

      What? That's crazy. So it's now illegal for drunk high school kids to call their parents to get them from parties? "Mom, I know you're gonna be mad, but..."

    38. Re:Excuse me but... by jeffy124 · · Score: 2

      you're talking bullshit.

      My post was about the driver being sober. Most cops would be happy to find that a driver is a "designated driver" in a car where everyone else is drunk. They would see it as a group of friends who took the time to be responsible about themselves and safety of others and probably let them go.

      The only way what you're talking about could be true is if you're under age. In which case, a cop simply needs to smell alcohol on your breath (no breathalizer req'd) and he can take you in. In many states, that means loss of license for underage drinking, regardless of whether you were behind the wheel when you get caught.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    39. Re:Excuse me but... by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      you'll get pulled over, but would be excused because you (the driver) are found to be sober

      Ok, fine. It's a hassle to be pulled over like that simply because my passengers are drunk, but what the hey...

      Unfortunately, a mile down the road is another cop, who pulls me over and I go through this again. If this trip is of any length, I'm likely to get stopped more than once. At this point, I'll simply ignore the flashing lights and talk to the cop from my driveway.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    40. Re:Excuse me but... by JimFromJersey · · Score: 1

      What happens when the system fails and prevents the car from starting?

      --
      between the greater and lesser infinities sleep the dreams undreamt
    41. Re:Excuse me but... by NuclearWinter · · Score: 1

      That's another good question... What if your friend had been drinking and the car says "DRUNK PERSON" to the cops and you get pulled for absolutely no reason except being a designated driver?

      --
      "I feel every flower that is screaming to consume you." --Acid Bath
    42. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or even worse, allows someone terribly intoxicated to think that they're sober enough to drive? lol.

    43. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never mind all of that, but isn't there a basic violation of civil liberties, and the beautiful American constitution going on here...if not in the letter than in the spirit?

      you yanks should really try to live up to that great document...(signed, Canadian)

    44. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm plagerizing here but "you can't apply a technological fix to a socialogical problem"

    45. Re:Excuse me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is a very interesting arugument from an acedemic point of view, but THIS TECHNOLOGY WILL NEVER BY INSTALLED ON MY CAR.

    46. Re:Excuse me but... by deathscythe257 · · Score: 1

      well, considering one of my friends was arrested for just that- being a DD- recently, i would say that it is illegal.

  2. Why not... by maddogsparky · · Score: 3, Interesting
    just disable the car if the driver's breath doesn't pass? That would be cheaper for them and the rest of us since we wouldn't have to pay the cost of the police processing and legal procedings, and they wouldn't drive in the first place and get a fine or jailtime.

    --
    science is a religion
    1. Re:Why not... by vitamino · · Score: 1
      I think disabling the car would be a little drastic -- what if the sensor failed? Then you couldn't drive at all, until you got it fixed. And what if there was an emergency? I think that it would be much more helpful if there was a warning light on the dash (perhaps the silhouette of a martini glass) and perhaps a sound that informs the driver that the alcohol sensor has been tripped. That would give us consumers a good idea as to how reliable this technology is as well.


      I think having a breathalyzer in the car is a good idea, because drunk driving is clearly a problem. But as soon as you start sending that information outside the vehicle where anyone can receive it, I feel it violates privacy issues. What else can be detected by analyzing air in the cabin? I like to eat quiche. Am I next?

    2. Re:Why not... by notFunny · · Score: 1

      if they can come up with this type of technology maybe they could come up with the GPS+medivac alarm system to go withit so when the car is disabled you can still push a button to have an ambulance come pickup your poisoned buddy.
      the ambulance will be a faster/more equipped option for her any how.

    3. Re:Why not... by pinkelefant · · Score: 1

      yea...
      Damn..its *your* car...just bash the hell out of that thing on the steering wheel..
      or put a wet towel on it..;-)
      jeez...

      --
      Feel free to concat me with all your troubles...
    4. Re:Why not... by jeffy124 · · Score: 2

      IIRC, there was a program like that out there for repeat offenders. Get caught DUI or DWI more than once, get a device placed in your car to prevent driver from starting car while drunk, along with other license restrictions. Refusing the device gets greeted with a suspended license or other penalties.

      The nice part here is that the person was dumb enough to do it once, got caught, went through the penalty, etc. Then was truely dumb enough to do it again. At this point it is completely legal to restrict the person's driving privliges, and providing the alternative to the suspended license gives the person a change to resurect themselves, and keeps them otherwise functional members of society.

      Dont remember how the program works or if the passenger's drunkness had an impact. I remember seeing it a really long time ago on some news show (maybe 12-15 years ago?). I dont know if such a program is still in use somewhere....

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    5. Re:Why not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it should be a court issued device that is only installed in cars owned and operated by habitual drunk drivers. If you have to pass a breathalyzer to start the car, you can only start it if you pass, you can cheat by having a sober person start it, but you could then just have the sober person drive in the first place. Many people have 1 or 2 drinks over a night and drive home without a problem, the real problem is the person having 10 drinks in a relatively short time and then drives home. Everyone says "it's our right", but when do the innocent people driving around you have rights? How about the right not to get hit by some drunk asshole? I'd rather have that right.

    6. Re:Why not... by VultureMN · · Score: 1
      "the ambulance will be a faster/more equipped option for her any how."

      Not if you're out in the middle of nowhere. Also, there are some places the ambulance crew might not be able to get to.
      "Okay, drive down highway 44 'till you pass Buck's place, take the first right, take the first left after you pass the stop where I hit that deer last year, go until you pass the big ass stump, follow the dirt road to the boat ramp, drive up the sand bar to Finney's place, and we'll be right there."

  3. Designated Driver ? by Tomun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    More like it signals police if ANYONE in your car has been drinking.
    What a really good idea.

    1. Re:Designated Driver ? by Spotless+Tiger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...ANYONE who is breathing, consistantly, all over the steering wheel perhaps.

      Modern vehicles have fairly complex air circulation systems within their cabs, hence the ease with which driver and passenger can have different climate controls, and stuff.

      I'm not saying it's a good or bad thing, the suggestions that the device disable the engine seem more reasonable to some extent, although I can see problems with that approach in emergencies, etc. But I doubt your suggestion of how it might fail is valid, and therefore a real reason to oppose it.

      --
      Racists should be sent back to where they came from
    2. Re:Designated Driver ? by eXtro · · Score: 1
      Some vehicles have complex circulation systems, but not everybody uses them. They're also not so complex that the air in the "non-drinking" portion of the car will be necessarily be free from alcohol vapours.

      Take a drive in your car with its complex ventillation system. Give your buddies all the bean burritos they can eat, see how isolated your environment is from theirs when they've released a few sneaky but deadlies.

    3. Re:Designated Driver ? by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

      Still more efficient than stoping people at (mor or less) random, as is the case now.

    4. Re:Designated Driver ? by sparcy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure there are multi-zone climate controls which distinguish between driver and passengers, but how many cars have these systems? I would imagine they make a small percent of all the cars on the road.

      Just for kicks, say all cars had the multi-zone climate system, how well would this system work if the windows are down? If you have the windows opens I would imagine the wind would whip around the air to a point where it might not get a good reading. I think this would also lead to false positives since with a lot of air flow a drunk passenger might set off the sensor.

      I can see these big brother systems leading to people being slower to buy the new items with these "features."

    5. Re:Designated Driver ? by blitz_0ne · · Score: 0

      I never drink and drive cuz I might spill my drink.

      --
      Eres puto...soy cabron...
    6. Re:Designated Driver ? by kableh · · Score: 1

      Yea, but like it will stop cops from pulling over people at random?? That is mentioned as a benefit to the device, I just have a hard time swallowing it.

      Then again, maybe I'm just cynical because most of the cops I have encountered live up to every pig stereotype.

    7. Re:Designated Driver ? by novakane007 · · Score: 1

      Nevermind if someone HAS been drinking. What if a waiter spills a glass of whine all over you and on the way home you get pulled over because of this device. In some areas like Alberta you have your license suspended for 24 hrs when under suspicion of DUI. That would make for a serious inconvience considering you may not have consumed a drop of alcohol.

      --

      WURD!!
    8. Re:Designated Driver ? by Zenjive · · Score: 1

      stoping people at (mor or less) random
      Umm, cops don't pull people over at random... ever hear about racial profiling?

      Now, if you would have said 'stopping people for no good reason', that would have been more accurate.

      --


      A vacuum is a hell of a lot better than some of the stuff that nature replaces it with. - Tennessee Williams
    9. Re:Designated Driver ? by hex1848 · · Score: 1

      They should run the thing with XP and use .11 to transmit the information back. Think of the fun you could have screwing with the raw sockets being transmitted from that asshole who cut you off a mile back..

    10. Re:Designated Driver ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, cops don't pull people over at random... ever hear about racial profiling?

      In other professions, this is referred to as statistical analysis and is usually considered a good thing. Too bad we have to let political correctness get in the way of efficiency.

    11. Re:Designated Driver ? by yesthatguy · · Score: 1

      Racial profiling is the exact opposite of randomness. They pull people over because they're black(/hispanic/asian/alaskan native/whatever). Around here (PA), they have sobriety checkpoints, where they stop people (everybody if it's light traffic, or randomly in heavier traffic). It's a very good reason, because every time you go out at night, there's a threat you'll be pulled over and caught if you're driving drunk. If you're sober, you're merely held up for a minute or so and allowed to continue.

      --
      Yes! That guy!
    12. Re:Designated Driver ? by BlueTurnip · · Score: 1
      But all it does is SIGNAL police, that doesn't mean an automatic ticket. The police would then test the driver, and decide what to do based on the result. That's why this is better than a system which simply disabled the engine if it sniffed alcohol.


      For instance, if a car signals a cop and the cop sees there is only the driver in the car, he will certainly pull him over. On the other hand, if the car signals and the cop sees a driver who is driving just fine and two people in the back seat who may have been drinking, he might not pull the car over.

    13. Re:Designated Driver ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you get pulled over, explain the situation and ask for a breathalyser test. Its that simple. A reasonable cop would let you on your way, and an unreasonable cop should be reported and fired. The device doesn't convict you or even write you up. It just requests that you be pulled over and checked.

    14. Re:Designated Driver ? by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      For instance, if a car signals a cop and the cop sees there is only the driver in the car, he will certainly pull him over. On the other hand, if the car signals and the cop sees a driver who is driving just fine and two people in the back seat who may have been drinking, he might not pull the car over

      Bull. Much of this will be at night, when you can barely even see in the car, much less the number and condition of the people inside. The car is driving just fine? Means nothing, a lot of drunks drive fine, it's just their reflexes are virtually nonexistent. Furthermore, how often will this happen? How many cops do you pass on a 30 minute drive? Sometimes none, sure, but sometimes a lot. Every single one of them is likely to pull you over on suspicion of DUI, even if all you've got is some spilled wine on your shirt or a drunk in the back seat. Explain to me how that's in any way, shape, or form reasonable.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  4. And soon we will have... by MoobY · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... the web page that says "cut the red chord and the sensor is out of bussiness"

    --
    --- Sigmentation Fault - Comments Dumped
    1. Re:And soon we will have... by bbqdeath · · Score: 1

      Yes, but Congress will simply pass a law making it a felony to perform the cutting. Not sure how they'd react to a web page showing how it was done. End result: dilemna whether to be a good citizen and risk getting pulled over or be a felon to protect your civil liberties.

      _I_ humbly suggest we all get perfume sprayers and put Vodka in them. Then we give the sensor(s) a little puff before we take off. Too many false positives will crush any system. (Unless "tampering" with these devices is also made into a crime, for everyone's safety of course.)

  5. Hmmm... by The+Fast+Choker · · Score: 4, Funny

    Could they put a detector in the car that tells the cops to bring a change of underwear for little kids on those too-long trips where they just can't hold it anymore?

    --


    nWo 4 Life
    1. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you need an electronic sensor to tell you this either your nose doesn't work or you don't have kids.

    2. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Humour alert.
      Besides, it was "bring a change of underwear", not "get the police to notify you that your child had soiled their pants."

  6. So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Shivetya · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gee, it seems very easy to defeat... let alone what if you have 3 very drunk friends in a closed window car?

    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right. They can set arbitrary requirements up until the public throws them out.

    Now, forcing this on people with at least one dui conviction would not be out of the question would it? Still the ease in fooling it kind of defeats the purpose.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  7. A Problem by Mik!tAAt · · Score: 1

    The article fails to mention that how can the sensor tell how many people are in the car, and how many of them are actually drunk? Because if the breathalyzer just measures the level of ethanol fumes inside the vehicle, you are bound to be stopped by a police when you are for example driving home from a party with your friends, who have been drinking.

    --
    This is the place where you write something that will make you seem like a complete idiot.
  8. oh this is just fanTAStic. by Emil+Muzz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So every time you hit the switch for the windshield washer and spray what, in many cases, is a fairly strong solution of ethanol onto your windshield - right by the ventilation system intakes in most cars by the way - this thingy signals to all police in range that you're having a 4-alarm kegger in your backseat?

    That's not the only "innocent" source of ethanol vapours, either - there are plenty of things used in a car that could create them, and not to mention the fact that this better be one hell of a specific fuel cell to only detect ETHANOL vapours. From my chemistry days I seem to remember that fuel cells are quite versatile in their ability to catalyze not just the target reaction, but other similar reactions. Such as perhaps butyl alcohol or methyl alcohol, neither of which will get you drunk, but both of which are present in a lot of cleaning products...

    Just what we need, really! Another "excuse" for cops (cough, cough, particularly southern cops) to pull us over because they don't like the little darwin-fishy on our car's backside...

    --
    ... not in here, pal, this is a mercedes...
    1. Re:oh this is just fanTAStic. by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 1

      This device would be installed by car manufacturers...don't you think they'd manufacture the car in such a way that the normal functions of the car won't trigger it?

      --
      "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."
    2. Re:oh this is just fanTAStic. by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      The point is that these people make something that could potentially be used for good, but decide that it should be used to screw with people.

      How about not allowing the car to start? keeping the drunk off the road... nooo let's allow them to drive but get the police involved... Must have been invented by a lawyer to help boost business.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:oh this is just fanTAStic. by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      Oops forgot to add... someone suffering from severe halitosis caused by gingivitis can set off a breathalyzer.... (seen it done! the guy was stone sober and still registered 0.12) something about the substances given off by the body that works like you mentioned.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    4. Re:oh this is just fanTAStic. by RevDobbs · · Score: 1
      Just what we need, really! Another "excuse" for cops (cough, cough, particularly southern cops) to pull us over because they don't like the little darwin-fishy on our car's backside...
      On the topic of expressing your self through your vehicle decorations, I've made it a point not to. All it take is some punk with a pocket knife and a grudge against your bumper sticker to really ruin your morning...
  9. What if you are the designated driver? by jon323456 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So the police pull you over because your friend is pumping out enough ethanol vapors to send the sensor into the stratosphere. Thats great. Is the plan just to never transport anyone who has been drinking?

    I am however relieved I'll be able to drive around hyped up on crack in the future without having my car narc on me.

    1. Re:What if you are the designated driver? by joeboo · · Score: 2

      No kidding. If they install this, then you can't ever give your drunk friends a ride home. All this means is that people will find out where the sensor is, and disable it.

      --
      Joseph W. Breu
    2. Re:What if you are the designated driver? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the police pull you over because your friend is pumping out enough ethanol vapors to send the sensor into the stratosphere. Thats great. Is the plan just to never transport anyone who has been drinking?

      Be sensible. They can use this device as a way to detect possible drunk drivers with no intervention from the suspect. If they detect alcohol, they can give an official breath-a-lyzer test. If you're the designated driver, you have no worries.

      This does not replace breath-a-lyzers, it enhances the process of getting drunks off of the road.

    3. Re:What if you are the designated driver? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, it tries to get drunks off the road by allowing more effecive harassment of the people who are driving drunk friends around or who had a single beer during lunch (=alcohol levels well below the limit).

      It allows the cops to zero in on suspicious cars. It's like insisting that every apartment must have a cocaine detector in case the inhabitants use drugs.

    4. Re:What if you are the designated driver? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      If i am DD, i have the RIGHT not to be pulled over jst b/c someone else in my car is drunk. If this becomes common, i sure as hell won't be a DD anymore..

    5. Re:What if you are the designated driver? by Underdog · · Score: 0

      Disable it? No way! By my choice I'm always the designated driver. If I end up with one of these gems in my car, I'm going to jam it. Find the sensor and lay a hose to it from the passenger seat where my wife (the drinker) sits. It'll be fun letting the cops pull me over and smile innocently when they can't figure out why my sensor was flashing/beeping/whatever and I breathalyze at 0.00%. If enought people do this, their system breaks down. It's just my little way of screwing with a system that I don't agree with. I could easily add this to my other hobbies, terrorizing telemarkets by giving them TCPA lessons and leading the cause to refer to Windows XP as "Windows Ack" the smiley made by the letters XP (squinting and sticking out tongue) looks like someone who took a swig of something nasty.

  10. worse than that by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    It sounds like it could trigger if sombody spilled a drink on you at a social gathering and nobody had even been drinking from your car.

    --
    science is a religion
  11. here's a better idea by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just sell friggin breathalyzers to the general public so they can see for themselves if they're over the legal limit. Why do we need all the Big BrotherTM crap? How the hell is that supposed to help anything?

    If you let people take responsibility for themselves you'd be surprised what you find. Most people I know who have ever been cited for DUI didn't realize they were over the legal limit.

    Is there some type of breathalyzer available to the general public?

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    1. Re:here's a better idea by Emil+Muzz · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I think sharper image sells one, as do a number of random on-line retailers. Not exactly a high-popularity item, though - not too many people are really that thoughtful, and they cost at least a hundred bucks. Not to mention the fact that they need to be calibrated every so often. That could be another issue for in-car sensors? What of when they go out of whack?

      --
      ... not in here, pal, this is a mercedes...
    2. Re:here's a better idea by ath0mic · · Score: 1

      http://www.rvstuff.net/bt3500.html delevoped by PNI (couldn't seem to find thier page)

    3. Re:here's a better idea by isa-kuruption · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society... they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves. In fact, they probably believe people are too stupid to take responsibility for themselves.

      There was a story here in NJ where a drunk fell over himself at a bar and sued the bar. Of course, the bar had insurance, and despite the fact it was the drunk's own fault, the bar was "guilty of serving alcohol to a guy who was already drunk." (or so the prosecution claimed). The case was settled out of court by the bar's insurance company, but it just goes to show that people just don't think other people are responsible enough for themselves.

      But just notifying police as a drunk guy drives by seems kind of "too late" to me. If the user has to drive a mile before getting to a point where a cop is, then that's 1 mile the drunk driver could kill someone. A few years ago they were talking about putting these systems in cars of people convicted of prior DUI's. The premise was before they could turn the key, they'd have to blow into the breathalyzer and if you werent at or above the limit, it would allow you to start the car. This is probably a better solution.

      This problem would also be solved if we had a better public transportation system in the U.S. If people relied more on public transportation than their own automobile to get around, we wouldn't have so many of these problems... but this is another subject altogether...

    4. Re:here's a better idea by Bobman1235 · · Score: 1
      Is there some type of breathalyzer available to the general public?

      I've seen one in Brookstone for about a hundred bucks. Seems a little pricey, but if they have one for a hundred most likely you can find another one somewhere else for half that price. I don't know how reliable these things are, but...

      Ooo, see, just did a Google search and found this and this too. Do a little searching people, if you want these thigns they're out there for pretty cheap. 35 bucks or so.

    5. Re:here's a better idea by lay · · Score: 1

      Actualy, there is. I don't know what it's called, but at least here in Portugal they were planning on putting on the market some disposable breathalyzers. You'd just use them once and throw them away, and eve though their accuracy is not top-level, you can get a pretty good idea if you've drank over the legal limits. They're suposed to be cheap and available in gas stations. Pretty good, if you ask me. At least takes care of the mental excuse for drinking that extra 'ilegal' beer because you "don't know if you've gone too far already".

      --
      Lay
      Weakly typed languages will bring us armageddon
    6. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      I think it's interesting that you disparage "liberals/socialists" in the first line of your post. First of all, the terms are not interchangeable. I am a socialist. Most of my friends are just liberals. You should be able to find an explanation of the difference in any good online dictionary.

      As to your claim that socialists(like me) and liberals don't want people to make their own decisions, I don't think the US Democratic Party(which is what you think when you think "liberals/socialists," because of your incomplete understanding of that term) has any monopoly on government interference in personal life. Or did Dubya legalize pot and it just didn't make the news here?

      I hope he did. I can't take much more of these artificially high prices.

      But then the last line of your post is a call for public transportation! Guess what? Public services like that cost money. What are you, some kind of tax and spend liberal?

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    7. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      Not exactly a high-popularity item, though - not too many people are really that thoughtful, and they cost at least a hundred bucks.

      Yeah, see, that's really only a good investment if you're an alcoholic, I guess. Even then, I'm not sure I get the point...I'm a pretty enthusiastic drinker(probably not *quite* an alcoholic), and I've never had to wonder if I was drunk before. You just sort of know...

      That could be another issue for in-car sensors? What of when they go out of whack?

      Oh, I'm sure the wrongfully arrested person will be free to prove, at his own expense, that the sensors failed. If you like, you can just think of this as another way for rich people to beat DUIs. "My highly-paid expert can prove that my personal Breathalyzer had failed on that night, Your Honor."

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    8. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      Just sell friggin breathalyzers to the general public so they can see for themselves if they're over the legal limit.

      Do people really have that hard a time telling if they're drunk? I always know right away. Of course, I've had years of practice in recognizing the state...

      I don't have any source at all on this, but here's an anecdote for you:

      A few years back, I read about a bar that had had liability problems based on people driving home from it while intoxicated. The owner bought a Breathalyzer wall unit, just like those things that take your blood pressure or try to predict what a red-hot lover you are. He encouraged people to use it before leaving the bar, and taped the number of the local taxi company(just one, a small town) up on the wall next to it.

      Then, a couple of months after that, he took the unit back out. His patrons would order trays of shots, then sit around the machine trying to see how high they could "score."

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    9. Re:here's a better idea by UM_Maverick · · Score: 2

      giving breathalyzers to the general public is typically a very, very bad idea. Instead of using them to make sure they're safe to drive, people tend to use them to see just how drunk they can get...I've seen many a college student push a few too many tequilla shots down in an attempt to get "officially drunker" than his buddies...

      trust me, it gets messy.

    10. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Am I the only person who thinks that personal breathalysers are a bad idea? These devices tell you whether you're legal to drive, not whether you're safe to drive. There's no enforcement either - if someone gets a positive test, it would be very easy to ignore the result if the thought they were borderline or questioned the accuracy of the device.

      I remember seeing a story on Tomorrow's World (or something similar) about cars that required a breath test before the ignition would work. I think this is a much better solution (assuming the technology works) as it can enforce a positive result by immobilising the engine, and it doesn't impinge on privacy like the system at hand appears to. (I guess one major flaw is that a sober friend could perform the breath test for you, but then why aren't they driving in the first place?)

      Personally, I know that my driving is not 100% when I've had even a single drink, and that's a good enough reason for me not to drink and drive at all.

    11. Re:here's a better idea by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Why do we need all the Big BrotherTM crap? How the hell is that supposed to help anything

      Because driving pullovers are the primary means of catching not just DUI's, but of grabbing people with outstanding warrants, bail jumpers, parole busters and of course meeting your all important "War on Drugs" quota. The more excuses there are for pulling you over and making you prove your innocence, the better it makes the monthly arrest sheets look.

      Hmm, I wonder if they can produce a version that detects "Driving a Vehicle Innapropriate for your Ethnicity and Expected Legal Earnings" or "Driving in an Inappropriate Neighborhood for your Ethnicity or Social Status"? That would save the police from having to go through the farce of inventing violations and excuses for stop-and-searches.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    12. Re:here's a better idea by n-baxley · · Score: 1

      Most people who are over the legal limit are not coherent enough to know that they are drunk. That's why the limit is there. Now you want them to take a test and interpert the results them selves? Maybe we need a brethalizer test before posts to /.

    13. Re:here's a better idea by 2can · · Score: 1

      I have seen pocket tests...kind of like litmus paper for alcohol...can't vouch for the accuracy, though...

    14. Re:here's a better idea by Nick+Number · · Score: 2

      http://www.rvstuff.net/bt3500.html delevoped by PNI (couldn't seem to find thier page)

      I don't think I'd shell out 50 bucks for this. They proclaim quite prominently that its results can't be counted upon:

      NOTE: This product should be used only to give an indication of the possible presence of alcohol in the blood. Do not rely upon it to determine intoxication or whether it is safe to drive a vehicle or operate equipment!

      If it's not reliable then you might as well go with your own perceptions about your level of intoxication. If in doubt, call a cab.

      Of course then they close with

      If you suspect that you or a loved one has had too much to drink, the BT3500 can help you. Never drive under the influence again!

      It sounds like they're trying to have the best of both worlds.

      --
      Promote proofreading. Don't mod up sloppy posts.
    15. Re:here's a better idea by bmacy · · Score: 1

      A reasonably good idea in theory... a former colleague had one just so he could stay out of trouble.

      Sure enough, he gets pulled over after a company party and explains yes he has been drinking but he took a breathalyzer test and he's under the limit. Officer has him try his and he's over the limit. The guy even showed him taking the test on his device... apparently his driving was showing symptoms so none of it really matters.

      So he gets to ride his bike 80mile round trip to work for the next 6 months.

      Brian Macy

    16. Re:here's a better idea by unitron · · Score: 2

      Yeah, nothing quite so improves the public transportation experience as a train, bus, or trolley car full of drunks. :-)

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    17. Re:here's a better idea by Amanset · · Score: 2

      I always thought that Sweden was one of the most socialist countries we have these days, yet they seem to sell breathalysers in their high-street shops, which kind of debunks the "socialists won't let them" theory.

    18. Re:here's a better idea by DCheesi · · Score: 1

      Well, now that the limit is .08 in pretty much all of the US, it could be argued that for some people, the legal limit is lower than their safe limit. Which is the whole problem with the way DUI is handled. The limits are so low that many people have sympathy for those who get a DUI; also people may get used to driving over the limit, and eventually start driving when they're truly drunk (who wouldn't have otherwise). BTW, for some people, one drink may be too much; for others, it's not even close.

      Instead of lowering the limits to where everyone is breaking the law, they should have kept the limit higher, and imposed more effective penalties for first offenses. The automatic DUI level should be a maximum level at which you couldn't possibly be safe, not the minimum level at which hypersensitive people get drunk. The cops have always had the ability to give someone a DUI at lower levels if they thought they were impaired; that ability should be used more often, instead of an absolute cutoff which has only partial relevance to actual impairment. In many cases, factors such as sleep deprivation and stress levels can contribute as much to being impaired as the BAC itself.

      And FYI, I don't drive after a drink or two either, but *only* because I'm paranoid about cops.

    19. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I thought it was a bunch of conservative housewives that got prohibition passed in the US, not the liberal commie pinko scum. But that's just me.

    20. Re:here's a better idea by jdcook · · Score: 2
      "Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society... they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves. In fact, they probably believe people are too stupid to take responsibility for themselves.

      There was a story here in NJ where a drunk fell over himself at a bar and sued the bar. Of course, the bar had insurance, and despite the fact it was the drunk's own fault, the bar was "guilty of serving alcohol to a guy who was already drunk." (or so the prosecution claimed). The case was settled out of court by the bar's insurance company, but it just goes to show that people just don't think other people are responsible enough for themselves.

      FYI, there is no "prosecution" in a civil case. There are only plaintiffs and defendants.

      Your claim seems to be that only the drunk should take responsibility for his actions. Isn't the bar responsible for its action in serving the drunk? Or does the bar get a free pass because it is a servant of the market and can therefore do no wrong?

      I am always skeptical of anecdotes about some horrible thing that happened in some lawsuit. All too often the reality of the situation and the decision is different. For instance, the McDonald's coffee case. This is still routinely pointed out as an example of an out-of-control civil justice system. But the people who claim this never seem to point out that the woman who was burned tried to settle solely for her medical expenses (a few thousand), that McDonald's had already had hundreds of such claims and chose to ignore them, that McDonald's was shown to deliberately serve their coffee at a much higher temperature than either home coffee machines or other fast food chains (because it takes longer to drink hot coffee so there are fewer refills and you can use cheaper coffee and still get a decent aroma if you make it very hot). Moreover, the award was later reduced.

      "This problem would also be solved if we had a better public transportation system in the U.S. If people relied more on public transportation than their own automobile to get around, we wouldn't have so many of these problems.

      Since you are down on "liberal/socialists", who is going to pay for the mass transit systems you want? Clearly the market will not provide.

      --
      Q:How many libertarians does it take to stop a Panzer division? A:None. Obviously market forces will take care of it.
    21. Re:here's a better idea by oddjob · · Score: 2

      That beats the old fashioned method of seeing who passes out first.

    22. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What kind of an idiotic breathalyzer is that? Mine goes up to 0.15, which makes it most sensitive around the legal limit (0.08 here), just as it should be.

      Maxing out that meter is ridiculously easy. Once you're past the legal limit, two more beers will peg the needle.

      Not much of a sport there.

    23. Re:here's a better idea by AgTiger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Years ago, there was a bar in Ontario Canada that I used to frequent. They installed a brethalyzer unit that cost 25 cents to use. It dispensed a sterile paper straw. You inserted the straw in the inlet for the air, blew, and got a reading.

      It even flashed red rather brightly when you were over the legal limit (.08 for that corner of the world).

      At first the patrons didn't like it, but in later weeks it got pretty frequent use, and for some became the badge of honor in a game called "Let's see if we can cause the machine to overload on fumes". The guys would laugh when they set the machine off, but they _would_ go sit back down and wait it out a while longer.

      Mission accomplished, and without the need for the police to become involved at all, or without them becoming notified either.

      Admittedly, this doesn't address the issues of people who won't voluntarily use such a machine, or those that drink in an establishment (or their home) that doesn't have one of these testers, but it was a good non-intrusive, non-offensive start, and it _did_ accomplish some good.

    24. Re:here's a better idea by DCheesi · · Score: 1

      The whole point is that you don't know when you're legally drunk, only when you're impaired (by your own standards). If you actually try one of these things, you may be surprised by the results...

    25. Re:here's a better idea by operagost · · Score: 1
      But then the last line of your post is a call for public transportation! Guess what? Public services like that cost money. What are you, some kind of tax and spend liberal?
      They would only cost money to implement. After a while, fares would more than pay for running costs, except most American cities are run by liberals/socialists so the system always runs in the red.
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    26. Re:here's a better idea by TheFlu · · Score: 2

      Now that's a good idea. I know what I'm getting all my alcoholic friends this Christmas: a breathalyzer keychain / bottle opener.

    27. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      My experience is that I am impaired long before I am legally drunk. I am 6'3" and 200-odd pounds, and according to charts, it takes four drinks in one hour on an empty stomach to get me legally drunk.

      If I drink four drinks in one hour on an empty stomach, I am *fucking wasted.* Like Shane MacGowan wasted. And I am a much-more-than-occasional drinker.

      You mean to tell me that other people feel *sober* at proportionally the same level of alcohol consumption?

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    28. Re:here's a better idea by Ratteau · · Score: 1

      Most people can tell you when they are drunk. However, legally drunk is not so cut and dry. I couldnt tell you what .10 or .08 feels like, and I dont think I can draw that line. A lot of people convicted of DWI, like another poster said, can honestly say "Wow.. 2 beers and Im over the limit? I had no idea. I felt fine."

      If Ive been out and had a few but feel ok, I certainly wouldnt mind a 2nd opinion. However, Im not one of those people who dont give a sh*t about anyone else on the planet but myself.

      Your anectote is a sad but true commentary of our society. What would be even worse is if someone did take the breathalyzer, passed, killed some people on the way home, and then tested positive. I saw that comming when I started reading it...

    29. Re:here's a better idea by junkpunch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society... they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves. In fact, they probably believe people are too stupid to take responsibility for themselves.

      People DON'T take responsibility for themselves. People ARE too stupid to take responsibility for themselves. That's why there are so many drunk drivers and drunk driving accidents and fatalities.

      Isn't this obvious? If people were responsible, they would not be driving drunk in the first place.

    30. Re:here's a better idea by junkpunch · · Score: 1

      Just sell friggin breathalyzers to the general public so they can see for themselves if they're over the legal limit. Why do we need all the Big BrotherTM crap? How the hell is that supposed to help anything?

      Are you really this naive? People who drive drunk are irresponsible assholes. They don't give a shit about themselves or anyone else. What makes you think they would buy a breathalyzer and actually use it?

      All the people that I know who have DUIs are jackasses who knew EXACTLY what they were doing.

    31. Re:here's a better idea by Atomix8 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I think I'd spend all my time with one of those seeing how high I could get the readings.

      "wow, I finally got a .19%!"

    32. Re:here's a better idea by mjm7 · · Score: 1

      http://www.sharperimage.com/us/en/catalog/productv iew.jhtml?sku=BT300

      They say it shouldn't be used to tell if you'll get a DUI - but I think it's b/c they don't want to get sued in the sue-happy America we live in. I think it's very useful for when friends come over for the game and have lots of beer. I don't want my friends leaving drunk and hitting someone - b/c then I get sued... This allows me to say, "Yeah, I know you think you can drive... but you're .81 so, no keys!"

    33. Re:here's a better idea by isa-kuruption · · Score: 2

      If you want more details...

      The drunk arrived drunk (as the patrons of the bar have said). He pulled the same stunt in 3 other bars before hand, except they didn't have liquor insurance. The three bars all testified he complained he's sue but backed away when he found out there was no money to win. However, the same stunt was pulled in 4 places. It just so happens that the place that got sued was the place with the insurance. Oh, and also, the guy was a regular at the bar and the bartender knew him (something like around 2 years) and said he had only 2 drinks when he usually had 6-8 drinks before getting drunk.

      Oh well, there's more information for ya ;)

    34. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society


      Please leave this out or else back it up. I'm a socialist and I'm opposed to this. I see the right-wing statists and especially the corporations as the ones wanting to be Big Brother. The only reason you see the leftists as being Big Brothery is because you're not leftist. All politicians are the same, whether they be leftist or rightest; they're all just as bad and they all fuck us over when they get the chance.


      Your story about the NJ bar case is also non-sequitor. This waiving of personal responsibilities is NOT a liberal or leftist value; it is an AMERICAN value. ONLY America has cases that fucked up, and there are plenty of states more socialist than the US.


      Otherwise you make a good point. Just don't include flamebait. Unless you're planning to back it up.

    35. Re:here's a better idea by isa-kuruption · · Score: 1
      Isn't this obvious? If people were responsible, they would not be driving drunk in the first place.

      No, it isn't obvious. One of the side effects of alcohol is lack of judgement. If you can't make logical decisions because you are drunk, how are you supposed to make the responsible decision to drive or not?

    36. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      They would only cost money to implement.

      My point is still the same.

      After a while, fares would more than pay for running costs, except most American cities are run by liberals/socialists

      "When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less."

      Liberals are not socialists. Socialists are not liberals. I think you should learn the difference. There are, in fact, many different definitions of "liberalism,", but I can't think of any that match every tenet of socialism.

      If you cannot tell the difference, people are always going to suspect that either your intelligence or your critical thinking skills are lacking.

      so the system always runs in the red.

      Which one is Rudy Giuliani, a liberal or a socialist? Or is the New York subway system in the black since Mayor Art Critic was elected?

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    37. Re:here's a better idea by junkpunch · · Score: 1

      THAT'S MY WHOLE POINT! People are not being responsible in the first place, so why would you expect them to use the breathalyzer? The alcohol makes them more irresponsible.

    38. Re:here's a better idea by jdcook · · Score: 1

      Do you have a case citation or a newspaper article?

      --
      Q:How many libertarians does it take to stop a Panzer division? A:None. Obviously market forces will take care of it.
    39. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an idea for a different device, you breath into it and then start the car, if you are then in an accident...it kills you! One problem with drunk driving accidents is that the drunk hardly ever is seriously hurt if at all. All of the talk of innocent until proven guilty, what about the innocents that are killed by the drunks? I say if you are drunk, cause an accident, then it kills you or atleast hurts you a lot.

    40. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take offense at this because I dont drink, to me this just says that someone is assuming that I am an alcoholic or I am guilty until proven innocent. Lets see how you like this when your car falsly reports you and the officer throws you in jail (just for the hell of it, it happens all the time).

    41. Re:here's a better idea by Mike1024 · · Score: 2

      Hey,

      Just sell friggin breathalyzers to the general public so they can see for themselves if they're over the legal limit.

      An interesting idea, but it probably wouldn't work. Just as speedometers allow people to see if they are over the legal speed limit, people will still exceed it by 'Just a bit, it won't matter'.

      If people want self regulation, they could just count how many drinke they've had, and work out from that if they can drive. Or better still, don't drive at all for 6 hours after drinking alcohol.

      A better system would be a relay on the starter motor cable, that turns off when it detects alcohol. That is, people don't get arrested, they simply cannot make the car start if they are drunk. That way, people couldn't drive drunk, but wouldn't have to get arrested.

      Oh, and we in the UK can but one of these. You can likely get them in America also.

      Michael

      --
      "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    42. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you'd be surprised at how normal you feel when you're "legally" drunk. It doens't take much and I can barely tell at all. .9 in some states is not even buzzing.

    43. Re:here's a better idea by blahedo · · Score: 1
      Since you are down on "liberal/socialists", who is going to pay for the mass transit systems you want? Clearly the market will not provide.

      Well, the market might provide (I believe would, but we can't know for sure until we try it) if we actually made the market internalise all of its costs. That is, driving a car does damage to roads and the environment, as well as creating noise pollution and creating traffic that slows down the other cars; but none of these costs are factored in to the driving of the car (except possibly the first: some states funnel parts of their gas taxes into road repair, though that is rarely the only source of such funding). As a result, driving a car seems much cheaper.

      It is usually considered a socialist (or "European", which seems to mean the same thing these days to Americans, *sigh*) idea to increase gas taxes and car taxes, but it actually is fully compatible with a libertarian view as well, particularly as it means that the market actually can work out the best balance between driving cars and taking mass transit, not to mention providing a source of funding for things like road building and repair, noise and exhaust barrier construction, and environmental cleanup, so that it's the people who use a thing that pay for it.

      So to answer your question: raise gas, new car, and annual car taxes and the market will provide.

      --
      ``This, too, shall pass.'' ---Eastern proverb
    44. Re:here's a better idea by TOTKChief · · Score: 2

      I won't get into the liberal/socialist issue: my concern here is with the serving of alcohol to someone who's far too gone. Establishments that serve alcohol have a right and a responsibility to turn someone down if they're too far gone.

      I've been asked if I was to be driving once or twice. [Every time, I had a DD. I'm crazy, not stupid.] After responding with a no, the server would then serve another one. But I have gotten a dirty look from a bartender once when ordering. I think they don't realize that I'm a bigger guy than I look and that I also hold my liquor well--but you know, I'm glad they ask. If someone did turn me down a drink, I wouldn't get hacked at all--I think I'd realize they were doing me a favor.

    45. Re:here's a better idea by greenrd · · Score: 1
      It is usually considered a socialist (or "European", which seems to mean the same thing these days to Americans, *sigh*) idea to increase gas taxes and car taxes, but it actually is fully compatible with a libertarian view as well, particularly as it means that the market actually can work out the best balance between driving cars and taking mass transit,

      I am a socialist, and I can tell you, you are mistaken. The libertarian concept is to let the market work out the best price by itself, without govt intervention. "True" socialists believe that won't work, thus we need both govt intervention (in the short term) and democratic factories, offices, etc. (in the loooooooong term). You are thus on the socialist side of the fence on this particular issue. Sorry.

      Hint: Just because you've had it pounded into your brain that socialism is somehow evil, doesn't make it true.

    46. Re:here's a better idea by jdcook · · Score: 2

      Good point. That would definitely help. It's hard (sometimes) to separate market failures from market perversions.

      --
      Q:How many libertarians does it take to stop a Panzer division? A:None. Obviously market forces will take care of it.
    47. Re:here's a better idea by greenrd · · Score: 1
      They would only cost money to implement. After a while, fares would more than pay for running costs, except most American cities are run by liberals/socialists so the system always runs in the red.



      I love that kind of line. "XYZ is corrupt because they're socialists". I hear that sort of thing all the time. A brilliant example of assertion without evidence. Right up there with "You should obey God because the Bible says so". Bravo!

    48. Re:here's a better idea by humphrm · · Score: 2
      Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society... they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves.

      You're probably right.

      In fact, they probably believe people are too stupid to take responsibility for themselves.

      They're probably right.

      There was a story here in NJ where a drunk fell over himself at a bar and sued the bar. [...] (or so the prosecution claimed).

      Just a pointer, people suing others are "plantiffs", not "prosecutors." Prosecutors deal with criminal complaints. Criminal complaints don't involve insurance settlements.

      the bar was "guilty of serving alcohol to a guy who was already drunk."

      Don't know about New Jersey, but in most states this is, in fact, illegal.

      This problem would also be solved if we had a better public transportation system in the U.S. If people relied more on public transportation than their own automobile to get around, we wouldn't have so many of these problems... but this is another subject altogether...

      Alright, now those flashbacks to drunken trips on the Tube have all started again, thank you very much!

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    49. Re:here's a better idea by room101 · · Score: 2

      That is why, when the police officer pulls you over, they actually give you a breathalizer test; instead of just weighing you and measuring your height.

      Those are only a guide, they don't really tell you crap.

      --
      room101 -- how much can you stand before they break you?
      (they always break you eventually)
    50. Re:here's a better idea by loraksus · · Score: 2

      Because "Dumb Fuck Drivers", who have multiple DUI's obviously don't give a shit about the amount of alcohol in their blood when they drive. They don't give a damn that their reaction time goes to shit either.

      What can I say - some people need "Institutionalization".

      Yes I'm biased, a 4 (well, 5 when he hit me) time _convicted_ drunk driver fucked my car up, and screwed up my back. He wasn't just over .08 though, he passed out in the police car and the paramedics had to come to drag him to the hospital.

      And yes, there is a cheap breathalyzer, they cost about $3 and can be found at 7-11's.
      http://www.lastcall.org/
      I've seen one packs for $3, supposedly lastcall sells 2 for $4.95 w/ $1 shipping included.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    51. Re:here's a better idea by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      "since Mayor Art Critic was elected"

      Hell yeah.
      His job is to question where and how public money is being spend.

    52. Re:here's a better idea by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      Not exactly ...
      Experience shows that socialist administrations are usually way more corrupted than the norm.
      So, in this regard, he was right.

    53. Re:here's a better idea by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 2

      For heaven's sake, being a liberal or a socialist doesn't mean one wants big brother. Geesh. Clearly a "big brother" is not good for society, as the point of society is not to turn us into an ant colony.

      My personal hypothesis for the purpose of society is to maximize discretionary time while simultaneously minimizing survival pressures. This may require giving up some individual actions, but nobody at all wants to give up more than is strictly necessary. And I consider myself a socialist, because I put the good of society ahead of the good of the individual. For instance, I prefer light rail projects over widening freeways. I think it is ridiculuous that my country, the USA, has the strongest (or nearly?) economy in the world, but reasonable healthcare is out of reach for many of its citizens.

      But I don't believe that anyone thinks George Orwell's _1984_ is a good plan for a healthy society. If you want to preach about responsibility, quit pointing fingers at "the liberals/socialists". That is antiproductive, and therefore, antisocial behavior.

      -Paul Komarek

    54. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      His job is to question where and how public money is being spend.

      Perhaps he could spend a couple of bucks on making sure the public schools teach verb tenses?

      Disclaimer: This is a completely unfair comment, as I have no way of knowing where mimbleton was educated. Any flamers should bear in mind that I acknowledge this simple fact, and am just being a smartass.

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    55. Re:here's a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I consider myself a socialist, because I put the good of society ahead of the good of the individual.

      I've yet to hear the words "for the good of society" used in conjunction with anything that sounded like it was going to be very good for me, and the last time I checked, I was as much a part of "society" as anyone else. Has it ever occured to you that "society" is nothing more than the sum of the individuals who compose it? By your reasoning, we have an exelent argument for bringing back slavery. After all, the majority were well served by the institution, and the rights of relatively few were compromised. Indeed, those called upon to serve should recognize their civic duty and social responsibility to the greater good.

      I submit the highest good is not the greatest good for the greatest number, the highest good, and the responsibility of government, is preservation of the rights of the individual.

      There is no "society", there are only individuals and families."
      --Margaret Thatcher

    56. Re:here's a better idea by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      Oh well "spent"

      How is your German or Russian ?

      Because my English is guite good considering the fact I learned it when I was 15.

    57. Re:here's a better idea by spyderbyte23 · · Score: 1
      Oh well "spent"

      How is your German or Russian ?

      Ya mogoo govoreet po-Rooski horosho, aber meine Deutsche ist nicht gut.

      And you didn't read my disclaimer, either.

      /me looks smug

      --
      -- Support Ometz le-Serev.
    58. Re:here's a better idea by TBBle · · Score: 1

      At the service stations here (Oz), you can buy a one-shot breathalyser thingy which simply tells you if you're over the 0.05 limit or not.

      And you can buy a breathlyser unit for about $50.

      I can't see why they _wouldn't_ be purchasable? Are they some kind of munition in a way I don't even _want_ to comprehend.

      I prefer being over here where any damn idiot can get a breathalyser, but you need to have a good reason to have a gun, than the US alternative apparent from this question. :-)
      --
      TBBle

      --
      Paul "TBBle" Hampson
      Paul.Hampson@Pobox.Com
    59. Re:here's a better idea by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      I know I did not.
      I just assumed it was a sig.

    60. Re:here's a better idea by blahedo · · Score: 1
      Hint: Just because you've had it pounded into your brain that socialism is somehow evil, doesn't make it true.

      Naah, I happily consider myself to be socialist (my party affiliation is Green: definitely a variety of socialist). I was just pointing out that, while the idea isn't what you'd usually call libertarian, it's compatible with their worldview of "let the market work it out" by using taxes to incorporate a number of market externalities directly into the market---perfecting the market, as it were. I don't doubt that there exist libertarians that would oppose this plan, but there are a number of libertarians I know that are in favour of it as well.

      --
      ``This, too, shall pass.'' ---Eastern proverb
  12. Alternate Solution? by ath0mic · · Score: 1

    I would think it would make more sense to use the senor technology to allow/deny use of the vehicle entirely. The current solution requires police to be present and detect the signal sent out by the "breathalyzer" and this has obvious shortcomings. I would think that it would be better to have the driver's blood/alcohol content grant or deny operation of the vehicle by connecting some simple device to the ignition. (On a side note, I would love to "test" out these devices) Just my $0.02

  13. Insurance company? by sjpm · · Score: 1

    How about this is installed on a voluntary basis? Tell your insurance about it and get a lower premium. Sounds like a much better idea than forcing it on people.

    I'm willing to bet that given the location of the sensor, and some duct tape it is quite easy to defeat as well.

    What if your significant other (who had a bit too much to drink) is sleeping it off on your shoulder? You telling me the sensor can tell the difference? If so I am very impressed. Combine this with some local PD that goes in a little too heavy handed when they get that sensor notification and I see some people winning the litigation lottery.

    As always, vote with your wallet, if you don't like the idea of this, don't buy a car that has it.

    1. Re:Insurance company? by radja · · Score: 2

      a dutch insurance company is (going to?) offer this for speeding. get a gps installed, and you pay a whole lot less, unless you actually do speed. this is NOT related in any way to speed-tickets..

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  14. Transmits "other information" as well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What's to stop them from transmitting your speed and license plate number as well? Automated speeding ticket robots anyone?

    Keep saying to yourself, "There is no such thing as Big Brother."

    1. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you are driving a car you are using a deadly weapon in a crowded public place.

      The government therefore imposes restrictions, including traffic laws, speed limits, licences and qualifications upon anyone who wishes to do this. This seems reasonable to me. What is the point in having speed laws and then claiming they should not be enforced?

      In the future maybe the government will ban anyone from driving a car on manual, rather than letting the safety computer drive it for them, on a public road (or at least a busy one). If it means less deaths, I'm for it.

      (Also means you wouldn't need a designated driver).

    2. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      We already have this. A car rental place in New Haven CT is 'fining' renters whose GPS device shows trhat they are speeding more than 80 MPH.

    3. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by firewort · · Score: 2

      Oh heck.

      Everything is a deadly weapon, quite likely including the food you choose to eat. The difference is only within the speed it kills you.

      We ought not to have speed laws, we ought not to have licenses, we simply ought to enforce personal responsibility.

      If you are dumb enough to walk in traffic and get hurt, too bad, don't blame someone else for "speeding" where speeding is anything fast enough to hurt someone.

      If you are a poor enough driver but insist on driving anyway, and hurt someone, you should be held responsible for your actions, too.

      All of these gadgets and 'innovations' that babysit and 'Big Brother' us are unnecessary if people would take responsibility for their actions.

      --

    4. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Greyfox · · Score: 2

      Oh we have the technology to ticket every single person on the road for speeding. It'd be easy to set up and easy to automate. Doing so would cause an immediate public revolt that would result in speed limits being greatly increased or completely eliminated in a lot of areas. This would result in an extreme drop in ticket fine revenues which many cities depend on. We continue with the arbitrary enforcement of the speed limit not because of a safety issue but because of a revenue issue.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    5. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Doctor_D · · Score: 2

      What's to stop them from transmitting your speed and license plate number as well? Automated speeding ticket robots anyone?

      At this rate, pretty much nothing. Hell here in little ole Toledo, Ohio, they have cameras at several intersections to dole out tickets for running red lights. What's a few more bucks to install recievers at these same intersections to record and automate tickets for speeding or having "too much" ethanol vapors floating around your car. Before long they'll fine more and clever ways of fattening the localities's cash box from all of the fines.

      --
      "If you insist on using Windoze you're on your own."
    6. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohio sucks, I was pulled over at 8am on a Sunday for going 85 in a 65 with no one else on the road, I like MA much better(I'm from Boston). No one mentions that if ALL cars have it and "big brother" drives, then "big brother" has to obey also. I think they should have one where if a police car turns on it's siren just to get through a red light, then it should ticket them. Also, in MA, you can be going 80 in a 55 and a cop will fly by you like you are standing still. They will also get a ticket. Big brother is not a fictitious man up in the sky that judges us, people make laws and people break laws... no magic involved.

    7. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Doctor_D · · Score: 2

      I can agree with that. I really hate driving anywhere in Ohio. You have people going slow because of all of the cops and construction zones. Hell I remember I came back from having spent july 4th in jersey, and I had passed 21 cops on my way back to Toledo. Bleh. And it seems if you have an out of state license plate you're more apt to get stopped.

      I like driving in MA, CO and MI much better than anywhere in Ohio.

      --
      "If you insist on using Windoze you're on your own."
    8. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by bobalu · · Score: 1

      When you are driving a car you are using a deadly weapon in a crowded public place.

      Unless you're not. There are tons of nice empty roads I regularly use that have speed limits well under what's safe for modern cars and a good driver.

      In the future maybe the government will ban anyone from driving a car on manual, rather than letting the safety computer drive it for them, on a public road (or at least a busy one). If it means less deaths, I'm for it.

      I'm sure they will - and it's people like you that are responsible for driving us (no pun intended) into a freaking fascist police state.

      --
      The revolution will NOT be televised.
    9. Re:Transmits "other information" as well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why shouldn't it transmit your speed and license plate number? If you want to use the roads then you should follow the rules.

      And for all of you who like to speed: What makes your speed any better than the one posted on the side of the road? At best you gain a couple minutes, but at worst you lose years.

  15. Re:complex air flows by maddogsparky · · Score: 2
    My job is designing automotive climate controls. Some vehicles have a thermister in the dash (combined with a fan that sucks in air) to detect the temperature of the cabin. It works ok for a single zone, (everyone has to agree on one setting), but when there are multiple zones (driver, passenger, rear, etc) where each zone has its own control, it doesn't work very well. There is too much cross talk between the different zones of the car to consistently figure out the temperature in a given area.

    --
    science is a religion
  16. Every citizen should be kept under surveillance! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Looks like we're really on a slippery slope towards a society where we are under automated surveillance for 24 hours a day.

    Following this logic, cameras should be placed in every apartment.Every citizen should be under surveillance because the statistics show that all crime is due the people who are alive and not dead.

    Fuck this! If this becomes a standard feature in all cars, I'll either disable it (criminal or not) or won't buy new cars anymore.

    Again the majority must give up all the privacy because of a small minority who find it too hard not to drink while driving.

  17. When driving drunk becomes a crime... by Sunken+Kursk · · Score: 5, Funny

    only criminals will drive drunk.

    Wait.

    Never mind. I thought I had something insightful.

    --

    When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me.

  18. This is ridiculous by Uttles · · Score: 1

    Talk about invasion of privacy! The real problem with this remote breathalizer is that if you go to the bar and have a drink or two you might pop up as drunk, but your blood level would be well below the limit. Then the cops get to pull you over and have fun hassling you just because you had a drink after work... I don't like it.

    --

    ~ now you know
  19. Party School? by small_dick · · Score: 5, Funny

    Something tells me TCU is not going to make the "Top Ten Party Schools" list anytime soon.

    --


    Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
    See my user info for links.
    1. Re:Party School? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Something tells me TCU is not going to make the "Top Ten Party Schools" list anytime soon

      Yeah, but UTA might have a chance.

      UTA engineers are road-testing the technology


      "So what do you do for your reseach project?"

      "Well, mostly I get drunk and drive around."

    2. Re:Party School? by SilentChris · · Score: 2

      I remember hearing when I first went to Boston College (for a year) that it was one of the "top ten drinking schools". My first reaction was, "I wonder how they determine that?" My second was a look of puzzlement when my honors professor said one of the libaries used to be an actual pub. 8|

    3. Re:Party School? by __aasfhc1949 · · Score: 1

      Hello:

      At the University of Chicago, we actually do have a pub in the basement of Ida Noyes Hall. However, I think we were rated number 300 out of the top 300 party schools in the nation, so this isn't a big deal for us.

      Rajiv Varma

  20. built in breathalizers already exist by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    I've seen or heard a news story about courts requiring the installation of a breathalizer hooked up to a car for convicted offenders. Unfotunately, I don't remember which state is was.

    --
    science is a religion
    1. Re:built in breathalizers already exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But in those cases, the car's ignition is disabled unless he blows a clean reading.

      Two problems with this attack on our dwindling privacy. 1) The damn thing shouldn't alert police, just keep the car from running. Wouldn't preventing a felony charge be the aim here?
      2) What happened to "innocent until proven..."? I mean, right now, they are installing similar devices into convicted drunk drivers' cars. If they want to install them into everyone's car, what is that saying?

      And as far as someone's comments about it being more effective than random roadblocks. Those are being slowly, but steadily, struck down in every place that implements them. Courts have consistantly ruled that these are a violation of a person's rights.

    2. Re:built in breathalizers already exist by Nurgster · · Score: 2

      2) What happened to "innocent until proven..."? I mean, right now, they are installing similar devices into convicted drunk drivers' cars. If they want to install them into everyone's car, what is that saying?

      Well, if it alerted the police it would give the driver a chance to prove his innocense. If it disabled the car, the system would be assuming guilt, and overriding it would problematic..

      --
      "Faith is the last resort of a desperate man" - Me
    3. Re:built in breathalizers already exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if it alerted the police it would give the driver a chance to prove his innocense.


      You mean it would give the driver the assumption of innocence, of course.

    4. Re:built in breathalizers already exist by yesthatguy · · Score: 1

      Well, they're certainly not going to use this as a more convincing piece of evidence than a breathalyzer. If this goes off, and then the breathalyzer says the driver has a .02% BAC, then they're not going to say that the monitor was triggered, so the driver must be guilty.

      --
      Yes! That guy!
  21. Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

    Notice that it will be used the same as a radar gun, as in it will help the police pull people over who are more likely to be drunk rather than just doing random checks.
    So if you have friends drinking in the car you might get pulled over and may have further tests administered and that is not so bad.
    I don't think this technology in itself would be used to lay charges, it is just a way to flag a car for further interogation.

    --
    You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    1. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by Subliminal+Fusion · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How is getting pulled over for something that's not your fault "not so bad"? I personally like to avoid the police as much as I can. Not because I've done anything wrong, but because there are some nasty cops out there who jump to conclusions way too quickly. All it takes is one power hungry-ego tripping cop to make for an extremely unpleasant experience. I understand that most police officers are there to help and are willing to give full assesment to a situation before proceeding, but I've been harassed for things that seemed illegal, but were perfectly legal. For instance- my sister was walking home from school one day and saw some traffic signals and street signs laying in a pile at a construction site. She asked the construction workers what they were going to do with the materials, and they said they were going to throw them away. She grabbed something and brought it back with her, but saw something else that was too big for her to carry at the time. Later, I took her by the site to get the sign, someone called the police on me, and next thing I know I have an officer at my door harassing me. Everything was legal, we got the sign in the middle of the day, etc. But this cop that showed up on my door didn't even ask for an explination. The first words out of his mouth were "Do you want to give those signs back?" I explained the situation very calmly several times to him, each time being accused of being a liar and a theif. Eventually he said "I'll investigate this" and I never heard from him again. The last thing I want is to be accused of drinking because I did a favor to a friend (and the rest of society) by driving someone who's drunk home.

    2. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

      How is getting pulled over for something that's not your fault "not so bad"?
      It is not so bad because it is not too much of a price to pay to have this service provided to society. I want to see drunk drivers taken off the roads! If that means that if I am transporting passengers that are drunk and I get pulled over occasionally, then that is fine by me. They can test me if they want and once they see that I haven't been drinking they'll commend me for taking the responsibility of being a designated driver.

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    3. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by Subliminal+Fusion · · Score: 1

      In a perfect world that's how it would work. In reality, a cop on an ego-trip doesn't need to give you a breathalyzer before he knows you're drunk because his machine told him so. Police harassment and invasion of privacy are big deals to me.

      Another case- I was on my way home from a club downtown with a friend of mine where we saw a show. Neither of us drank or did anything illegal, but a cop pulled us over and spent a good 10-15 minutes determining that no one in the car had been drinking, and gave my friend a ticket because he had a broken tail-light cover. It was a total case of profiling and harassment. A device like this would only worsen matters.

    4. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by Fun+In+The+Sun · · Score: 1

      It is not so bad because it is not too much of a price to pay to have this service provided to society. I want to see drunk drivers taken off the roads! If that means that if I am transporting passengers that are drunk and I get pulled over occasionally, then that is fine by me. They can test me if they want and once they see that I haven't been drinking they'll commend me for taking the responsibility of being a designated driver.

      I want to see terrorists taken out of commission. If that means my house gets occasionally searched to ensure I'm not building any bombs or planning any terrorist activities, then that is fine with me. They can look around if they want and once they see that I haven't been working with any terrorists, they'll commend me for being an upstanding citizen...

      Except for those overdue library books they found.

      And those MP3s I kept on my computer without owning the original CDs.

      And that fertilizer I got for my lawn ten years ago. I swear, I wasn't building a bomb!

    5. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

      Your analogy is faulty. When a car is flagged as containing alcohol in the passenger compartment, the car is a potential killing machine in motion. If it were possible to detect bombs inside peoples houses, they are not doing anyone any harm so there is no reason to raid your home. If you drink at home you don't expect anyone to come give you a ticket, do you?

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    6. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

      Maybe we should busting more cops on ego-trips !

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    7. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by forgeeks · · Score: 1

      How do they know if the driver is the one drinking?

      --
      -- Powered By Linux
    8. Re:Like the radar gun, this is a good idea. by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Your analogy is likewise faulty. A car is always a potential killing machine, regardless of whether alcohol is involved.

      Regarding bomb detection, my non-lawyer understanding of the matter is that cops may investigate your house without a warrant or cause provided that they stay on public property and only use commonly available technology. This means that they could walk by and see you toking or pointing a gun at someone, but camping across the street with a thermal imager requires a warrant.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
  22. or.... by ragnar · · Score: 2
    Or it will tell you if a passenger in the car has been drinking, which (last time I checked) isn't against the law.


    I'm really of two minds on this subject. Personally, I think that drunk driving costs way too many lives and is penalized too lightly. Just imagine if car crimes were treated like gun crimes. We really shouldn't treat car abuse so differently, given the vast amount of death and harm that results from drunk driving.


    That said, I doubt if the suggested change will make people more safe, and it certainly isn't lawful to report to the police if a passenger chose to drink alcohol.

    --
    -- Solaris Central - http://w
    1. Re:or.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Personally, I think that drunk driving costs way too many lives and is penalized too lightly.

      This is ridiculous. The number of people getting killed by drunk drivers per year is insignificant when compared to the number of people killed by malaria, AIDS and other infectious diseases.

      I don't like drunk drivers, but I sure as hell defend their right to make stupid decisions. Having Big Brother's camera/brethalyser/whatever up your ass just in order to stop you from acting stupidly is totalitarism.

      Being free also means that you are allowed to do stupid things!

    2. Re:or.... by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

      Even if being free means that you are allowed to do stupid things it still doesn't mean that isn't a line you cross when your freedom infringes on someone elses well-being (ie/ drunk driving). Driving is a privilege and not a right.

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    3. Re:or.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You should be punished based on what you actually did, not what you might do.

      Not every drunk drivers kills or maims someone.

    4. Re:or.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Driving is a privilege and not a right.

      Oh, I disagree.

      I do have the right to travel.

    5. Re:or.... by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

      >You should be punished based on what you actually did, not what you might do.

      Now how exactly are you being punished by what you might do? And how is doing this punishing? They are being rather unreasonable.

      >Not every drunk drivers kills or maims someone.

      So, therefore it's ok to drink and drive as long as you don't get caught.

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    6. Re:or.... by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0


      >I do have the right to travel.

      Yes you have the right to travel. As long as it doesn't infringe on my rights (which include not being killed by you "travelling" while intoxicated, in a car or any other vehicle).

      --
      You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
    7. Re:or.... by zuvembi · · Score: 1

      I'm really of two minds on this subject. Personally, I think that drunk driving costs way too many lives and is penalized too lightly. Just imagine if car crimes were treated like gun crimes. We really shouldn't treat car abuse so differently, given the vast amount of death and harm that results from drunk driving.

      Unfortunately, we've shown that doesn't work as much as you'd think. Most people who repeatedly drink and drive are alcoholics. As long as they have access to a car, they will drink and drive. Jail-time, penalties, fines, etc. don't seem to really work. One of the few things that does seem to work well is the breathalyzer on the steering wheel. This does two things, first it means they won't be driving drunk (because the car won't start if they're drunk), and second that they start to realize that they have a problem. This (preferably combined with substance abuse program) can drastically lower recidivism rates for drunk driving.

      So I guess the whole point of this is breathalyzer plus treatment is much more effective for everyone.

    8. Re:or.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now how exactly are you being punished by what you might do?

      You misunderstood me. It's the same thing as with drugs. To my mind people should do be allowed to do all the drugs they want. If they fuck up other people's life, they should be punished for whatever it was they did (neglecting a child, stealing something or hurting/killing someone) but not for doing drugs, which is an entirely personal choice.

      So, therefore it's ok to drink and drive as long as you don't get caught.

      It's OK to drink and drive as long as you don't hurt someone. If you hurt someone then you should face whatever punishment is coming to you.

    9. Re:or.... by loraksus · · Score: 2

      texas passed a law this week that makes it illegal to have any open containers in a vehicle. Not quite the same, but . . .

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  23. Driver vs. Passenger by devnullkac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    With an operating range of 18 inches, this technology might not trigger false positives from drunk passengers in taxicabs, but I don't know if I'd want to be the designated driver for my rowdy friends who say "Hey watch this!" and lean over to breathe on my car's sensors, bringing the wrath of the state police.

    MAD and similar groups would be well advised to consider this chilling effect before advocating the use of such devices.

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    1. Re:Driver vs. Passenger by goldspider · · Score: 1
      Don't be fooled, this is the sort of thing that MADD would love! Contrary to what their acronym implies, MADD is out to criminalize anyone who's had a drink, whether they are over the legal limit and/or driving or not.

      It's these kinds of small infractions on our personal freedom that serve as stepping stones to more severe and widespread violations of our rights. In a few years, MADD will be pushing for an outright ban of alcoholic beverages, and because of their "it's for the children" image, I fear they may get what they want at the expense of yet another personal liberty.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    2. Re:Driver vs. Passenger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah...they tried that already, way back when...it was called Prohibition. Didn't work - people just got drunk in "underground" pubs. Eventually they repealed it. MADD wouldn't be stupid enough to repeat history, would they? Oh...wait...this is MADD. Sure they would. ;P

  24. Problems by Uruk · · Score: 2

    What if you spill some wine on your seat? Are you going to be officially drunk when driving for the next 2 weeks?

    How on earth would this work? This would be hooked to a transmitter inside the car. Wouldn't this be the very first modification a person would make to their car would be to rip this friggin' thing out?

    What if someone else in the car is drinking? The pigs pull you, and you have to "audition for your freedom"?

    What's the range on the transmitters? Rather than getting the pigs all over you, why not just make other cars able to receive it so people could stay the hell away from you?

    Why does it NOT suprise me that this is coming out of Texas Christian University and not, say, MIT?

    Public safety threat or no, is it a good precedent to make it OK for the pigs to know about the state of your body at all times?

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    1. Re:Problems by pgpckt · · Score: 2

      Why does it NOT suprise me that this is coming out of Texas Christian University and not, say, MIT?

      That has got to be one of the most bigoted things I have heard said on slashdot. What are you trying to imply? That all Christian universities are incappible of providing scientific research? Heaven forbid (pun intended) that Christian schools try to help the community by developing a solution to one of society's ills.

      --
      Lawrence Lessig is my personal hero.
    2. Re:Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Christian schools try to help the community by developing a solution to one of society's ills.

      Ah, so that's where all those "you can become a heterosexual too" programs come.

      Christianity and science cannot co-exist. Christianity is fundamentally anti-intellectual and anti-science because instead of the nature it worships some never-seen-never-heard-about god. Anybody who claims otherwise is just fooling himself.

    3. Re:Problems by hylander_sb · · Score: 2, Informative

      Perhaps his point was that Christians tend to concern themselves with alcohol consumption, at least in this country. It's a stereotype, true, but not unearned.

    4. Re:Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They may be able to produce the Holy Handgrenade, but for real technology, I'll take my MIT humanists.

      The church(es) have too long a history of persecuting those who think.

    5. Re:Problems by zarathustra93 · · Score: 0

      Hmmmm, Jesus wants you to be a sheep and follow orders. Many people are perfectly content being sheeple. "well, if it makesme feel *safer*, then it must be good." Whatever.

      I am a personal fan of radical responsibility. If you drive drunk, you pay the consequences. I don't need the gub'ment, MADD, or some bunch of puritans subjugating my *body* to testing just so they can feel safer.

      Almost enough to make me go out and buy a shack somewhere out in the forest and hole up for a while until this type of crap blows over ;-)

    6. Re:Problems by Peyna · · Score: 1
      I was moderating this article, but I couldn't help but respond to this.

      Christianity and science cannot co-exist. Christianity is fundamentally anti-intellectual and anti-science because instead of the nature it worships some never-seen-never-heard-about god.

      Maybe the church back when it ran the entire country, and its political power was threatened by scientific discovery was anti-science. (Let's say back in the day of Galileo). That church was anti-science, and they believed that the only things that were true were in the Bible, and science was useless.

      You will now find that most churches and denominations work hand in hand with science. Galileo was still a christian, he just basically got kicked out of the church, but he understood why they were doing it.

      A quote from one of the greatest scientists of all time:

      "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." - Albert Einsten

      One final comment... drunk driving sucks. Losing privacy sucks. If there is an effective way to stop drunk driving w/o invading privacy, I'm all for it. I don't think the technology proposed in this article is what we are looking for, but it is a start. Maybe a device in the car, which when it is 100% certain you are loaded, it will disable the ignition. And it doesn't have to let anyone know about it. Heck if I know how that would work, but I wouldn't say it is impossible to have it work flawlessly.

      --
      What?
    7. Re:Problems by operagost · · Score: 1
      Science worships nature? I thought that was Wicca.

      If Christiantity was anti-intellectual, what are those monasteries doing with all those friggin' books? Jesus told us that we shall know the truth, and the truth will set up free, for crying out loud. Don't let a few bigots (like you) get in the way.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    8. Re:Problems by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2
      What are you trying to imply?
      Need I remind you that Prohibition was brought about by a group called, I believe, the Christian Temperance Movement? It's not unreasonable to draw a parallel, or to point out that a religion that a) has a bunch of strictures and b) honestly believes that anybody who doesn't believe is doomed to hell and c) therefore wants to do their best to MAKE people believe "for their own good" is likely to do things like this. And yes, you can parade forth tons and tons of examples of good members of all sorts of religions that would never try this. I can counter with tons and tons of examples, the poor schoolchildren in Ireland being a current example.
      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    9. Re:Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Why does it NOT suprise me that this is coming out of Texas Christian University and not, say, MIT?

      That has got to be one of the most bigoted things I have heard said on slashdot. What are you trying to imply?


      I think the original author is implying that Texas is overly concerned with people using psycho-active substances.

      While I bartended through high school (yes, it was legal for a 18 year old back then), we had to deal with the Texas Alcoholic Beverage commission. TABC is run by a bunch of right-wing fundamentalist whackos, takes 10% of your gross revenue, and can shut the bar down for a week for silly offenses like having a cleaning fluid behind the bar (apparently, we might try to dilute a fine bottle of scotch with drano.)

      TABC exists to hassle bar owners and patrons. That TCU came up with another way to hassle normal people is not surprising.

    10. Re:Problems by ClmbrMike · · Score: 1

      You are right in one respect -- science and Christianity cannot co-exist -- but only because mainstream science is done mainly with a humanistic, naturalistic, limited worldview as its presupposition. There are many Christian scientists out there who have made bigger leaps and bounds in their fields than any atheist could, and I attribute this to the greater understanding of the universe that comes from a worldview that presupposes the truth of the Bible.

      You are being just as bigoted and anti-intellectual as those you criticize. Perhaps if you looked at the world around you and put a little thought into the things you do, you might realize that nothing you do would make sense except under a Christian framework (but that's another topic).

      You claim that it is anti-intellectual to accept some "never-seen-never-heard-about god," but I could ask the same: how much faith do you have that there isn't a God? If I blindly accept the existence of my God (which I don't), you blindly accept his non-existence and are no less guilty than I.

      Further, to all who cry foul when Christians screw up and do stupid, violent things, I say GOOD! Now you finally understand one of the basic tenets of Christianity! Christians believe that there was a need for Christ simply because we are sooo screwed up and he's the only one that can fix us. So, if you don't like the stupid things going on in Ireland or Zimbabwe in the name of Christianity, GOOD! God doesn't like it either and their sin is no better than yours.

      I make no claims for fundamentalists or the right-wing. I just say that you should evaluate the efficacy of a religion by the actions of God, not by the actions of his followers (no matter how much they are SUPPOSED to reflect His glory).

      PS. You had better brush up on your logic. It's failing. And when you're done, ask yourself this: Where does logic come from, and for that matter, where do all absolutes come from?

    11. Re:Problems by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      There are many Christian scientists out there who have made bigger leaps and bounds in their fields than any atheist could, and I attribute this to the greater understanding of the universe that comes from a worldview that presupposes the truth of the Bible.

      I'm sorry, the what? The truth of the bible? You must be joking. There is no way you can call yourself a scientist, or even a logical person, and still profess the belief that the christian bible is a factual account of history. The universe was created in 6 days a mere 6000 years ago, mankind descends entirely from two people, this hippie was crucified and died and woke up 3 days later in perfect health. Uh huh. Kindly name one of these scientists of yours and explain why he or she could only have made their discovery because of their undying belief in the supernatural.

      Accepting the bible as fact without copious amounts of doublethink requires the individual to totally ignore any and all research into evolution, geology, astronomy, anthropology, and who knows how many more fields, all in favor of a totally unverifiable dogma with holes so big in it I could fly a 747 through them. All science is is a system by which we collect and verify knowledge. Faith demands that you ignore evidence in front of your face and accept only what you already "know" to be true.

      What we ask is that you provide the slightest bit of real evidence of the existence of this fabled mythical all-powerful entity and his whims about how we are supposed to act if we want to procure a reservation for an invisible non-corporeal aspect of our consciousness into an eternal paradise in the clouds. If you enjoy the belief, fine. More power to you. But will you please stop claiming that you are somehow superior to the rest of us because of it?

      If I blindly accept the existence of my God (which I don't), you blindly accept his non-existence and are no less guilty than I.

      How can you accept his existence in any way other than blindly? There's no proof whatsoever to his existence, and Occam's Razor implies that he therefore doesn't exist. And where'd you get the idea that I have to prove you wrong? You conjure up this random set of beliefs about life and death and tell me that I must provide evidence while you do not? I don't think so. How about I claim that there's a habitable planet in the Centauri system that is covered with beautiful beaches with scantily clad women all over the place just waiting to make my acquaintence. I challenge you to prove me wrong. You can't? Oh, well then I must be right and you're going to hell. That's about the extent of the christian argument covering god's existence.

      So, if you don't like the stupid things going on in Ireland or Zimbabwe in the name of Christianity, GOOD! God doesn't like it either and their sin is no better than yours

      And you know this how? Did he set fire to the tree in your front yard and say, "Mike, I don't like what's going on in Ireland and Zimbabwe in my name. Thank you." For all you know, he loves violent death. Certainly your church has dispensed its share of misery. You freely admit that practitioners of your faith are often steaming piles of hypocritical bullshit and then look to these same people for guidance? Explain to me why I would want to be a part of that.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  25. Now, what could one expect.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is another crazy idea from Texas, and on top of that a Christian University (we all know they're not hip to having fun) and on top of that, they're just sore about the whole Charles Whitman inncident.

  26. False Positives on Demand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How long before units that send false positives identifying the car in front start appearing.

    And why bother with the drunk drive test, just fit brake/steering monitors to rate the drivers reactions and general driving. If it appears the driver is incapacitated in some way, then it could start alerting nearby cops.

  27. What'd be better... by vulg4r_m0nk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    is a breathalyzer that disables email.

  28. We won't have to wait long... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...for this to be compulsory in the UK. It seems that the entire Western world is in the middle of some kind of social engineering experiment.

    Drinking and Driving is a stupid and dangerous thing to do, but relying on a system like this which is prone to error is almost as bad. You only look as far as the new UK Police obsession with speed cameras to see what will happen - I believe they tried to book a tractor the other week for doing 85mph on a motorway. They only dropped the fine and penalty points for the poor farmer in question when a tabloid newspaper intervened. What is the world coming to?!

    1. Re:We won't have to wait long... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It goes like this:

      1) Today's technology can make every wet dream of a control freak law enforcer real.

      2) Cops are delighted.

      3) Cops are also mostly tech illiterate, don't know the limitations of the surveillance technology. In fact, most of them will see the technology as some kind of magic. Magic that's never wrong.

      4) Since the magic says that the tractor did 85 mph, it must be true. Yeah, it sounds implausible at first but then again this technology is just so marvellous. Without it we would never catch all this crooks.

  29. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by fhknack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The issue isn't whether driving is a privelege, rather whether the proactive search is legal. The 4th Amendment states "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

    This ain't "probable cause," it's an invasion of one's person, and precisely the sort of thing the 4th Amendment is supposed to prohibit.

    See me weaving, driving too slowly, chugging a beer behind the wheel, mowing over little old ladies with walkers, or rolling down the window so the drunk sixteen-year-old girl in the passenger seat can toss her cookies: That's probable cause. Driving through town with invisible vapors in my car is not.

  30. Due process... by Kronus · · Score: 1

    You can't take away someones right to drive without some sort of legal proceeding. At the very least, you need a cop to have 'justifiable cause', or something like that. After all, there may be a perfectly legitimate reason why the car reaks of booze, like you're rushing your overly drunk friend to the hospital to get his stomach pumped. You need a human in the equation somewhere to make the actual judgment call about whether the driver should actually be driving.

    1. Re:Due process... by firewort · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You have no right to drive.

      Driving is a privelige not a right. We gave it up as a right when we allowed ourselves to be licensed to drive.

      My grandfather learned to drive, and was driving for several years before licenses were around. Then, it was equivalent to owning a horse. If you owned a car, it was your right to drive it anywhere you pleased, and it was in your best interest to not drive like a lunatic, so that you wouldn't kill yourself, others, and damage a really expensive car.

      Life was better then in a lot of ways from the perspective of rights that we have since signed away.

      --

  31. Can I get... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Can I get a little thing that, when attached to my head, will alert nearby police if I even think of committing a crime? Can I, please?

    1. Re:Can I get... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you get it installed, also have them hook up a 110VAC line to it so we can electrocute you quickly after you think of the crime.

  32. dmca by smeeze · · Score: 1

    this calls for the Drinking Millenium Copyright Act. Getting drunk takes a lot of energy and should therefore be copyrighted and not for the police to use as information to take whenever they want.

  33. Ha. by mlknowle · · Score: 1

    If the governemnt required installing these, would there be a sudden run on foreign cars?

    The tone of the article is that this is some fantastic development. They don't even CONSIDER the privacy issues.

    I hope that the Texas Christians get busted for driving after communion ;-)

  34. Duct tape is your friend by rkasper · · Score: 1

    If you find the air inputs and cover them with duct tape, you'll never be drunk again.

    1. Re:Duct tape is your friend by crazycorto · · Score: 1

      that seems like it will be almost completely true. i would imagine that such a system would make the somewhat educated drunk driver who knows how to disable the system much less likely of getting caught than he is now.

  35. BigBrotherLand2000 by SubtleNuance · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems like no better a time to repeat:

    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. "
    - Ben Franklin

    1. Re:BigBrotherLand2000 by Surak · · Score: 2

      This particular quote is typically used in response to the question of gun control laws (well, and probably many other things considering it was often used saying during the Revolutionary period), but it seems somehow appropriate here too. :-)

    2. Re:BigBrotherLand2000 by shine · · Score: 0

      Methinks you got it backward, Jack. When someone drives drunk they infringe on our rights. If we allow people to drive drunk then it is us that deserve neither liberty or safety.

      ~S

    3. Re:BigBrotherLand2000 by other_things_to_do · · Score: 1

      "Methinks you got it backward, Jack. When someone drives drunk they infringe on our rights. If we allow people to drive drunk then it is us that deserve neither liberty or safety."

      Right, the same way that sombody spilling their soda on the floor and getting distracted infringes on my rights. The same way that tuning the radio infringes on my rights. The same way that the fire truck driving down the road with its sirens on infringes on my rights (The cause of an accident in my case.)
      Get over it people. A drunk driver is not infringing on any rights until they are actually in an accident. The increased possiblity that someone may infringe on your rights does not mean that they are infringing on your rights.

  36. speeding cameras ready to implement in wash dc by YaRness · · Score: 1

    read the story here

    they had about 5 police cruisers carrying these camera/radar guns, and one stationary one at a street corner.

    just like red light cameras that have been in use for a couple years or so.

  37. Can't you just open a window? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would tend to reduce the concentration

  38. can you say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...after market modification?

  39. Scotch tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Get a roll of scotch tape ($0.79, WalMart).
    2. Apply patch to sensor.
    3. Drive happily ever after.

  40. Re:Every citizen should be kept under surveillance by mikewas · · Score: 1

    London is already blanketted with security cameras. Most are linked to private firms, hired by local buusiness or civic organizations. If they notice a problem they call the cops and supply the tapes as evidence.

    --

    "Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." --Napoleon Bonaparte
  41. Can you imagine... by Trollificus · · Score: 0, Funny

    ...a beowu... Oh, shut the fuck up!

    --

    "People should be allowed to keep midgets as pets."
    - Gov. Jesse Ventura

  42. What would be better is... by Subliminal+Fusion · · Score: 1

    Why not just install these on cars of known offenders? Make them breathe into a device that doesn't let the car start if they don't pass. I know these exist, but they're not used very much. I'd say one offence would be enough and the offender should pay the cost of the installation. There's absolutley no reason for car makers to install them on every car made. I personally wouldn't want to pay the extra $ for something that doesn't apply to me (as I don't drink). It's true that a system like that would be defeatable but that would take 2 stupid people (one being sober and stupid, which is a more rare condition than being drunk and stupid).

    I personally think that the government shouldn't do a whole lot to prevent people from doing stupid things that harm themselves, but when their actions affect those around them it becomes a different story.

    1. Re:What would be better is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if this offender is to drive another car? Are you going to restrict them from driving any cars that are NOT equipped with one of these devices?

  43. Maybe, maybe not by hylander_sb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This idea in and of itself is not bad, so long as its optional. I suppose there are a few people out there who don't trust themselves and would rather have a police officer catch them then be responsible for a death. Once this becomes mandated by government, that would be bad.

    I, for one, would prefer that the police actually do their job. Increasingly, the police are using automated devices to do their policing. It started with radar/vascar/lasers and now we have red light/speed cameras. They don't even have to be present for you to get slapped with a traffic tax. Shouldn't the issue be more about whether you are operating the vehicle safely as opposed to how much of a chemical you've ingested? MD's legal limit just dropped to .08. How can we be sure that no one can safely operate a vehicle at that level? One of the cornerstones of law enforcement is the discretionary power of an officer. Taking that away will go a long way towards creating a Big Brother society

  44. Broken Link by Spunk · · Score: 1

    The link to this story appears to be broken. Does anyone have it archived?

    Thanks!

  45. Convicted oui repeat offenders by thinserver · · Score: 0

    This might be appropriate as ordered by the court for repeat oui offenders. How many times has one of these sometimes unfortunate addicts killed someone, even after having their ticket pulled.

    As for the tape idea, a flow sensor that detects an obstruction...., but then, a rubber tube hung out the window...

  46. best solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the best thing you could do:
    have the ignition lock quickly moving around in a figure of eight. only the sober people would be quick enough to catch it, and get the key in :o)

  47. Re:No more alcohol by stevenbee · · Score: 0

    Actually, huffing gas will destroy your liver even more swiftly and thoroughly than alcohol!

    --
    Don't read this!
  48. A Marketer's Dream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm. Let's see. Here is our new model which will notify the police if you drive drunk, speed, drive eraticly, .... and costs $500 more than our other model which is just a car.

    Which one would you buy?

    The car buying public will make the decision if this technology gets deployed. IMHO it does not have a prayer.

    1. Re:A Marketer's Dream by shine · · Score: 0

      I think they said $100, not $500 and then again, air bags and seat belts didn't have a prayer either.

      ~S

  49. Further development by S.I.O. · · Score: 2, Funny

    TCU is already working on a new device which can detect blowjobs in the car. If the owner of the car is a politician, the warning signal automatically gets redirected to Washington Post and Time Warner.

  50. legal issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lesse.. they just determined that using IR cameras to spot possible probably marijuanna grow ligths is illegal.

    Does this fall under illegal search?

    Since drunk driving usuaully involves the vehicle being impounded, why not go ahead and have the device notify more than the police?

    With this technology, we could actually license it to other companies. Why just broadcast to the police? Lets open this up to private industry!!!!

    Upon detecting possible violations of the 'legal limit', I feel the device should notify:

    1) the police
    2) your lawyer
    3) towing company of your choice
    (your car is gonna get towed. be sure its someone you trust)

  51. And the difference from now is? by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 2

    Right now, they can stop you if they suspect you for drunk driving, with no real evidence at all.

    If this system became common, they would need to stop less innocent people in order to catch the same number of drunk drivers.

    1. Re:And the difference from now is? by shogan · · Score: 1

      No they can't. Suspicion is NOT probable cause. There has to be an observed violation before they can stop you. I know this from personal experience. My DUI was thrown out because the cop didn't have probable cause for the stop in the first place. There is a procedure that HAS to be followed.

    2. Re:And the difference from now is? by DCheesi · · Score: 1

      Just curious, as you seem to have some personal knowledge: Why do they need probable cause in your situation, but they can still do roadblocks and charge people with the same crime? Last time I checked, just being on a particular road at a particular time does not normally constitute probable cause. I've always wonered about this sort of thing.

    3. Re:And the difference from now is? by Bgreenber · · Score: 1
      I don't mean to be picky, but your personal experience seems to prove that they CAN (in fact, that they DID) stop you based on suspicion. Your case was thrown out, but the cop DID stop you.

      Seems to me that a cop can stop anybody for any reason (legitimate or not). Those who have the time/energy to fight it in court can weed out the bad reasons, but I'm sure many just pay the fine & move on...

    4. Re:And the difference from now is? by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      Road-blocks are OK because the cops are not singling out any one person. Generally a road-block has to have a specific purpose, eg DUI, they can't just search every car.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    5. Re:And the difference from now is? by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Either a) holiday weekends are, in fact, probably cause to suspect people of drinking, or b) because a roadblock/checkpoint checks EVERYBODY who goes through, it's not unreasonable search.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    6. Re:And the difference from now is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Specifically, the supreme court ruled in 2000 that checkpoints are permitted only if they shield the public from an "immediate, vehicle-bound threat to life and limb."

    7. Re:And the difference from now is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "they would need to stop less innocent people"

      the word is fewer

  52. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Actually there are some that would say the ability to travel is a right using the common vechicle of the day.

    At the very least, in the US you are pretty much screwed without a car unless you live right in a city. Anywhere else, and you're basically required to have a car.

  53. gob of caulk by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's cliche but it's true:

    Remote DUI sensor: $100.

    DUI accusation: thousands of dollars in legal fees and fines.

    Gob of caulk in the intake hose: priceless.

    Yes, there ought to be breathalyzers built into cars, at least if we're going to prosecute drunk drivers based on BAC - there's something fundamentally wrong when you can't know whether or not you're violating the law without taking extraordinary steps. But no way in hell should it be transmitting readings.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  54. Combinations by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
    You have a point there, and it was the first thing I thought of when reading the parents post. However it could be interesting to lock the ignition and be able to override it with, let's say, a 8-digit code to be pushed in under the hood or so, if you do this and drive, the cops should be alarmed.

    It seems rediculous, but it would prevent the very-highly intoxicated guy that is not able to stand on his feet to start the car. You on the other hand, only sligtly in the wind, will push in the code, help your buddy...and if the cops find you it's a good thing because they are likely to be able to help your wounded buddy.

    OT: I did my share of drunk-driving, and payed hard enough for it, a device like this would have caused me a lot less sorrow.

    --
    Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    1. Re:Combinations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      8 digit code to start the car. heh. it sure would make cars easier to steal for hackers.

  55. whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So every time you hit the switch for the windshield washer and spray what, in many cases, is a fairly strong solution of ethanol onto your windshield - right by the ventilation system intakes in most cars by the way

    So you're telling me you smell ethanol everytime you wash your windshield??

    Relax, public opinion will keep this out of cars. If it doesn't, do you really think it'll be hard to disable it?

  56. Benedict Arnolds.. by (trb001) · · Score: 1

    Sorry, the college student in me read this and thought "Damn traitors..."

    It's a good idea, but WAY too easy to defeat and WAY to easy to trigger incorrectly. Opening the windows would dilute the air/alcohol content, drunk people in the car would set it off, and what about products that have alcohol in them? I don't know what the concentration of alcohol is in household products like window cleaner or nail polish, but I'm sure there are some out there that still have alcohol in them...are they going to pull me over for having used Windex recently?

    --trb

  57. Re:No more alcohol by unitron · · Score: 2

    I'd rather sniff the models, as long as I get to choose the catalog.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  58. Such a shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr. King is dead and this dumb ass AC who hasn't figured out that this running gag died after the first time he tried it is still alive!

  59. drinking while driving should be legal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go ahead and flame me but that's what I think. Drinking while driving should be legal, driving while drunk (legally) is not legal. Sounds pretty simple to me.

    If I want to have a beer on the way home, then why not? One will not impair me, and I'm only having one. According to studies it takes two to three beers to take my blood alcohol level over the legal limit. So why not one while I'm driving? Really, it's not going to increase drunk drivers. If someone drives home drunk, thats reckless abandonment anyways. They have lots of drinks and drive home drunk, nothing, not even the law stops them. Heck most drunk drivers get off easy... I've known too many people where I work who got caught and they were either let off or got a slap on the wrist. So why can't someone like myself who drinks once in a great while and usually only one drink, drive home with it? Anyone?

  60. I Dunno... by E-Rock-23 · · Score: 1

    Granted, DUI is a serious problem and needs to be dealt with. But I honestly don't want to have to deal with the fuzz every time I go to the watering hole for a cold one. If this isn't one step closer to Big Brother in your car (already one of the few places you can still smoke a ciggy without getting bitched and whined at), then I don't know what is...

    --
    Blog Prophyts - Right On, Man
  61. Ut oh by RacerX69 · · Score: 1

    Better warn your teenage daughter not to use those Clearasil pads in the car.

  62. Goodbye freedom.. by Atomic_Furball · · Score: 1

    Yay! Another excuse for police to harass anyone they choose for no reason at all.

    I have a better idea. Why don't we just start putting newborn babies straight into prison. We'll leave them there until they can prove that they're not criminals, not smarter than anyone else, not capable of individual thought, and incapable of breaking any law or implied morality-flavor-of-the-week. We'll just forget about that "innocent until proven guilty" crap - it's practically gone anyway.


    What the hell is with this enormous new trend of obliterating personal freedom?? I'm not saying it's okay for some dumbass to drive drunk - that's a given. Why is it becoming necessary for the "athorities" to monitor a citizen's every breath (now, literally), under the assumption that we're not capable of making personal decisions without parent-like intervention?

    I can understand a legitimate use as a punishment/monitor for repeat DUI offenders, but nothing else.

    ...And just think about how many Tipper Gore types would gladly lobby for a device like this to be mandatory on all motor vehicles.

  63. I want one by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

    Just not in my car. Can you imagine getting ripped at a party, and then blowing into the thing, and waiting around for the cops to show up... :-)

    --


    I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
  64. They already have this by rrossman · · Score: 2, Informative

    I work (possible flame bait) at Circuit City in the car audio department (I'm an installer). I know first hand they already have devices you "blow into" to see if you are drunk or not. If you are fine, it let's you drive. If it senses you are drunk, the car won't start. (Pretty much it's just a Starter Kill which is nothing more than a relay tagged into your car's starter line). The only way to get these devices is if the court orders someone to have it installed in their vehical because of an alcohol related incident. Obviously someone who hasn't been drinking can just blow into the device incase someone does cut their foot with an axe (as suggested above).. or if you just want to cheat the system, and the car would start. This new device mentions about detecting air in the vehical, not just what's comming out of the driver. I live in a college town (Home campus of Penn State), and I know alot of people around here who designate drivers. This new device means more people getting pulled over for no reason, just because someone in the vehical was drinking. For some reason this just doesn't go over for me. But no problem.. how long do you think it would take someone to come out with a signal jammer if they did put this device into vehicals (or to put tape over the sensor)

    1. Re:They already have this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > how long do you think it would take someone to
      > come out with a signal jammer if they did put
      > this device into vehicals (or to put tape over
      > the sensor)

      ...or drive with all windows rolled down? Sense *this*.

  65. Eliminate the need for "random stops" by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My favorite line...

    "This would eliminate the need for law enforcement to do random stops as a means of catching drunk drivers."

    This implies that if these devices are mandated, we can trade the tiny bit of privacy we have left for an end to intrusive, unconstitutional roadblocks...

    ...But there's no way in hell they'll ever stop the roadblocks without a Supreme Court rulinng. My neighbor is a cop and she said a good percentage of arrests at roadblocks (sometimes more than half) are for crimes besides DUI, usually because there's a warrant out for the person and they drive through the roadblock. They also target the vehicles of people they know of to be "Druggies" for dog-sniffs while they're at the roadblock.

    The Police want their job to be "easier" at the expense of my individual liberties.

    Whoever posted that Ben Franklin comment should get 1million karma points...

    --
    Who did what now?
    1. Re:Eliminate the need for "random stops" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went through a road block tripping on shrooms, I also had 1 drink. The cop asked "have you been drinking, I smell alcohol" and I said "no, but my friend has been" and he let me go. I almost started laughing when his face became all disformed and was melting a little. The funny part is that someone said "don't go down a certain road" I said "ok" not knowing which road that was, and then drove down that road.

  66. Easy to defeat! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same as those damn GPS units that rat you out to rental agencies. Pop out the fuse, short it across a battery, put it back in. No prob...

    1. Re:Easy to defeat! by BlueTurnip · · Score: 1

      But remember, the easier it is to defeat something, generally the bigger the penalty if you're caught!

  67. A better idea... by toupsie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would like a sensor at the local police station in my neighborhood that alerts citizens when the cops are anally raping black men with a toilet plunger. Then, maybe, I would be interested in installing this sensor in my car.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:A better idea... by xeromist · · Score: 1

      Yeah, how 'bout a trade? The cops get a sensor to tell if I've been drinking, and I get a sensor that tells me when a cop is hiding in the bushes just to meet his quota of speeders.

      --
      This sig is exactly seventy characters long and a real waste of space!
    2. Re:A better idea... by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      These "black men" kill more cops than the other way around.
      A way more.

  68. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by paRcat · · Score: 1, Troll

    Does the constitution give you the right to put people in danger by driving while intoxicated?

    The thing is, this is a good idea. People go nuts when something happens that will let the authorities know when they're doing something against the law! I personally think this is something that could save some lives. And if it causes you to be pulled over when you are innocent, (liquor spilled on your clothing, friends who are drunk) then you have nothing to worry about, right?

    Honestly, I don't get why some people insist on certain "freedoms" when by bending those rules you could save many, many lives.

    But then, some people don't care about other's lives. Very sad...

  69. hmm... by superpeach · · Score: 1

    How long until people drive around wearing stuff like this so they can breathe through their windows/sunroof in those times when they really need to use their car.

  70. I'm not sure whats worse by Stalcair · · Score: 1
    the fact that anyone would see this as good, or the fact that it has not only been proven through history and exhaustive study (this type of tactic, that is) to not work, but that in the US it is unconstitutional. It makes me think more and more that our politicians, councilmen, sheriffs and police chiefs have never even heard of, much less read, the Constitution.

    So, it is both a bit depressing and rather amusing at the same time.

    --

    I seek not only to follow in the footsteps of the men of old, I seek the things they sought.

  71. The truly scary quote: by CrazyBrett · · Score: 1
    The signal could also carry additional data, such as a vehicle identification number, thus enabling officers to pick the offending vehicle out of a crowd, Kolesar said.

    Gee, that's great. While you're at it, how about transmitting the driver's criminal history so that the police officer can "keep a closer eye" on formerly convicted criminals! Also show a list of the 5 most recent destinations of the car so they can check if you've been anywhere you shouldn't be. Or better yet, give the car a program that DECIDES if you're a potential risk for criminal activity and radios the police for help!

    "This here slope sure is slippery!"

  72. DDA-Drunken Driver Assistance (just another TLA) by HRB · · Score: 1


    What about a device which tells YOU if there
    is any police around when you driving home drunken :-)

    Man, I love those new LBS (location based services) :-)

  73. Sharper Image breathalyzer by bobalu · · Score: 1

    I have one of those and it works pretty well. I don't usually carry it around, but if there's a holiday or something where they get really crazy with roadblocks and all it's pretty cheap insurance. There's not much difference between 0.06 and 0.08 in how you feel, but one is OK and the other gets you a DWI. So if you come out of a bar and you blow 0.08 you can kill some time by going into a nearby convenience store and when you get back in the car you're legal. Then if they pull you over as soon as you leave the parking lot (quite common around here) you're in the clear. That's worth every bit of $110.

    It's also useful if you have guests and they don't want to admit how whacked they are before driving home. There's a decent chance they'll believe the little breathalyzer and crash for the night instead of hitting the road and getting in an accident, which you the homeowner then gets sued for. Those commercials all say to have your drunk friend give up his keys but that can be pretty hard to do in practice unless you're gonna physically restrain them.

    --
    The revolution will NOT be televised.
  74. Bah. by Snar+Bloot · · Score: 1
    Here's Drunk Bob, on his way home from the tavern, weaving all over the road. Why? Because he's driving with his head out the window.

    "But occifer, I was just trying to dry my hair..."

  75. Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um... can anyone say "Roll down the window?"

    Freakin stupid... leave it to a bunch of bible thumperz....

  76. EASY/FREE SELF TEST!! by N3P1u5U17r4 · · Score: 0

    There is an easily available test you can perform yourself... for free even!

    Get ready... here it is:
    If you've had a drink, of any kind and any amount, don't drive. Easy.

    Take a damn taxi to the bar if you really need to go out and get your fix.

    --
    You're Just Jealous Because The Voices Are Talking To Me.
  77. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by fyonn · · Score: 1

    okay, I'm a brit so I don't have any constitutional rights at all however I'd say that this seems like another "but what about the children" flag waving attempt to lock people down.

    we're all responsible adults. this is supposed to be a world of "innocent until proven guilty" (although in the UK that is increasingly becoming false) and this is essentially a search of your person with no warrant or probably cause. hell, it's not even by the police, it's by a car company.

    the "first world" governments seem to be increasingly sliding towards an environment where their citizens are not allowed to do anything in case it hurts someone. how long will it be before we're all forced to wear think cotton wool coats in case we walk into someone? and have mind reading hats on in case we think about a crime (after all, if we're innocent, what have we got to hide?).

    ffs, can we not take responsibility for ourselves. if we commit a crime then certainly, we ought to repay our debt to society, but as long as we are innocent we should all have the right not to be harrassed by the nanny-state.

    *sigh* revlution brothers...

    dave

  78. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by cavemanf16 · · Score: 2
    Human life is the important thing here. It should be mandatory that all cars have these devices once they've been tested to be highly reliable, and not sending out 'false positives' on aftershave, etc. It would give police a much needed weapon in nabbing drunk drivers, which unfortunately help make driving a car more dangerous than flying in an airplane.

    However, it should also be mandatory that the officer doing the pulling over of suspected drunk drivers observe actual swerving, excessive speed, etc. to actually pull you over, because like everyone has said - designated driver. 3 Highly intoxicated friends could still probably trip this thing off, even with today's sophisticated 'localized climate control' systems.

    This is not a privacy thing. If you're driving drunk you're not 'robbing' a company of excess profits, you're not pissing someone off because you stole their images online; you're increasing your inability to avoid killing people. While I'm sure the police will occassionally abuse it, and piss people off, if it saves thousands of lives each year, I think it's justified. Just make sure to put enough restrictions in place on those 'controlling' the device so that those in power will be much less likely to try and abuse it.

  79. Employ NSA-linemuncher-like countermeasures by nixon · · Score: 1

    I know it'd be a hassle to get pulled over but if enough people rode around with a rag/sponge soaked in Jack Daniels in their car, I'd think the police would begin ignoring these little sensors tout de suite. Noble intent, dumb implementation.

    Cynics repsonse: The research was probably funded, in part, by automobile manufacturers at the behest of their legal counsel.

    1. Re:Employ NSA-linemuncher-like countermeasures by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Hell, a bottle of rubbing alcohol. Less likely to be able to give a pissed off cop enough to press an 'open container' charge. "It's the damnedst thing, officer. My wife was trying to clean some nail polish off, when I hit a bump, and the alcohol spilled ALL OVER the sensor, and now it's constantly registering at the top if it's scale."

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  80. How about "hotboxing"... by Robber+Baron · · Score: 2

    will it detect that too?

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

  81. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by unitron · · Score: 2
    "Actually there are some that would say the ability to travel is a right using the common vechicle of the day."

    You can legally travel by motor vehicle drunk or sober, you just can't legally be the operator of said vehicle if you're drunk or aren't licensed as a motor vehicle operator. In that case you can hire a driver or take a cab. Can't afford it? Well, you've got a right of free speech and to publish, but you don't get a government grant for a printing press, and your right to bear arms doesn't include a federal shotgun buying subsidy.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  82. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Tack · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This in itself isn't such a horrible thing, true.

    The real problem is more fundamental. People are slowly being desensitized to loosing their privacy. First we get sensors in our cars to detect if we've been drinking. Then they add sensors to alert cops if we're speeding. Next, cops will get alerted if we don't come to a complete stop at a stop sign. No problem right? I mean, these aren't too serious. No one should speed, and we should always come to complete stops because otherwise these could jeopardize lives on the road. Next they'll put cameras in our cars so we have a photo identity of the person responsible for breaking the above laws. Well that's certainly bothersome, but don't worry about it, the government will tell us, we already know when you're drinking, speeding, and rolling stops. Then the government sets up devices to monitor our phone and email conversations. (Well, we already know they're monitoring email at least.) No problem, you don't have anything to worry about unless you're breaking the law. They're also going to put cameras on the streets pointing at every house. This is for your own protection so that they can catch burglars better. Why stop there? Let's put cameras inside the home too.

    Yes, this is an unrealistic slippery slope. It's extreme, but you see my point. At what point do we draw the line? Putting cameras in our house is obviously invading our privacy. Putting alcohol sensors in our cars isn't? Who decides what violates privacy and what doesn't? I say stop them before they start.

    Jason.

  83. at the risk of being redundant ... by operagost · · Score: 1
    Those who would give up an essential liberty, for a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty, nor safety.

    The statement that you have nothing to worry about if you're innocent is invalid in the United States, where you are innocent until proven guilty and obligated to defend yourself, unlike most other countries.

    There are many freedoms we could give up that would save a few lives, but would life still be worth living?

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    1. Re:at the risk of being redundant ... by operagost · · Score: 1

      that quote was from Ben Franklin, BTW...

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  84. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by shogan · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but where do the exeptions stop? Who defines when it's OK to "bend" the rules? I think drunk driving is wrong, but this does kinda skip a few steps in due process. And I really don't think this is true probable cause for a stop.

  85. Expect To Be Supported by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real problem with this system isn't "ego tripped cops" or "what if's" with driving other drunks in the car. The real problem isn't even the fact that your personal information is being sent 24/7 from you. The real problem is that they expect to be supported. I mean how can any honest, christian american say this is a bad thing? Right? I mean that would be like ending social security or DARE programs. (Neither of which work.) My point is this: I hope that people don't get sucked into a solution because it is better then doing nothing, because if you have read any of the 100+ replys above this one, you might realize that it isn't. Maybe I am just a jerk that would rather see people get hurt, otherwhise I would not be against something with such an honest motive.

  86. how gay by allknowing · · Score: 0

    ...i'd find out a way to disable it

  87. This is just a test. by pwarda · · Score: 1

    This is just a test. Sorry

  88. Just Great!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work at a miller distributor and there are times when i drive home smelling like a brewery due to busted / broken beer cases at work. I also work late nights there (usually the time when cops keep an eye out for DUI/PI). If they implement this I'm gonna be making alot of new cop friends. :)

  89. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by operagost · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points for you, friend ...

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  90. I never drink and drive... by blitz_0ne · · Score: 0

    cuz I might spill my drink,
    I failed the breathalyzer so they through me in the clink.

    --
    Eres puto...soy cabron...
  91. 5th Amendment Problems by Chembal · · Score: 1

    At least here in the US, the 5th Amendment to our constitution guarantees the right against self-incrimination. IANAL, but having one's car tattle on you almost certainly crosses that line.

    --

    Life is but a mist upon the horizon.

    1. Re:5th Amendment Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In terms of public safety I think it can be bypassed. That is how they get away with the breathylizer being mandatory, and a penalty if you don't do it. Seems wrong to me.. (48 days till I can drive again, for refusing breathylizer.... was probably within the legal limit, but will never know)

    2. Re:5th Amendment Problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you get your license, you sign a little card that says you consent to being stopped and breathalyzed at any time, and that you forfeit your right to drive if you refuse. Not sure of the exact wording, or how it would affect this device, though.

  92. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by paRcat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're right, to a certain extent. But you're completely bypassing the outcome of each scenario.

    Outcome 1... you go out drinking, decide for yourself that you're ok to drive, and you end up killing a family in the process. Then, if you lived through the wreck, you're in prison for manslaughter.

    Ya, responsible adult. Responsible enough to kill someone. Nice.

    Outcome 2... you go out drinking, decide for yourself that you're ok to drive, and you get pulled over because of the gadget in your car. Well, guess what? You were doing something illegal anyway, you deserve the consequences.

    Outcome 3... you go out with friends, but you're the designated driver. Their breath causes you to get pulled over. "Ok sir, that's a fine thing you're doing. Get you friends home, and have a safe night." Not too bad, if you ask me.

    You can whine about your freedoms all you want, but it doesn't change the fact that this thing could save lives. It doesn't mean that people can read your mind, it doesn't mean that we'll have cameras watching our every move, it's simply a protection.

  93. I Saw This Presentation by Milican · · Score: 4, Informative

    I recent Engineering grad from Texas A&M University and I saw some TCU students (I believe the ones mentioned in the article) give a presentation for this at a conference I went to last Spring. I'll come right out and say I didn't like the concept of my car reporting to Big Brother. So if you see any bias in this comment now you know why. Full disclosure I suppose.

    Anyway, If you read the article closely you will see that each of the cars has a radio link that reports to everyone around you the sobriety of the driver. The Linx radio unit is actually a very cheap way to do low bandwidth wireless communications. So slashdot hardware hackers take note :)

    As you can imagine the alcohol monitoring concept did not go over well amoung my classmates. Personally, I think they might as well put a blinking alcohol barometer on your car. Of course, we were college students and our demographics do not lend well to this experiment.

    Another problem I had was with the obvious false positives from an alcohol sensing fuel cell. Perhaps they did find a way to distinguish from ethyl alcohol from bars and rubbing alcohol in perfumes. I know the article says they had, but I have serious reservations about the statement. But since I can't prove either way I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. As many have pointed out here what if you are the designated driver? What if you just went to a bar and someone spilled even a little beer on you? This has happened many times to me. The sensors will have to be ultra sensitive to pick up airborne molecules of alcohol.

    Although the motives of the students are well meant because we all don't want drunk drivers hurting our loved ones the cost to civil liberties are immense. A 24/7 "air tap" for alcohol would be an extreme invasion of privacy. There is no way you could get a wire tap without a court order and I don't know how these guys think they can get car manufacturers and the American pubic to agree to volunatary constant surveillance via an "air tap".

    In any case, to be fair these are Engineering students and their job isn't to decide the politics of the unit. Thats for Political Science types. I agree that their intentions are good, but the implementation is certainly not. I should also mention that the students and faculty I met from TCU were all nice and personable individuals and this comment was not meant to be a personal attack on them in any way. I simply do not agree with their topic of research.

    I am at work right now. But I will try to find some of the notes and info I took from the conference when I get home tonight. I should at least have a copy of their presentation on the conference CD-ROM. So stay tuned.

    JOhn

    1. Re:I Saw This Presentation by TOTKChief · · Score: 2
      In any case, to be fair these are Engineering students and their job isn't to decide the politics of the unit.

      As an engineering student myself, I disagree. I think it's our job when developing products to consider the ethical results. I think we're past the point when we just build something and hand it off to marketing.

      Of course, I work in a group where we have to do a lot of self-marketing, so maybe I see things a little differently than you do.

    2. Re:I Saw This Presentation by BarefootClown · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...I don't know how these guys think they can get car manufacturers and the American pubic to agree to volunatary constant surveillance via an "air tap."

      Probably the same way they always do things: automakers would be "encouraged" to include them in all new cars. Inclusion would not be mandatory, but probably in the same way that compliance with the mafia is not mandatory. The government could simply say "we think this is a good idea," and mutter things under their breath to the effect of "...and you'll get a looser tax audit if you comply." Same way they got the "black box" into airbags (you do know that if your airbag goes off, a vehicle data recorder notes your speed, whether or not your seatbelt was on, magnitude of acceleration (g-forces), etc.). Once the manufacturers include the devices, including the radio transmitters, the police wouldn't need a warrant--they would need only to listen to off-the-air broadcasts, which is perfectly legal.

      Getting these things into cars and into use wouldn't really be that difficult, and the people could probably be convinced to accept them: "The Chevy Boozer: the first car that will warn you if the kid driving next to you is drunk." Include an interlock device, you get "The Ford Fuzzy Navel: parents, don't you want to keep your kids from driving drunk?" With the proper marketing, the American sheeple will assent to anything. You'd be a "bad parent" if you didn't use the technology.

      The big problem is that sooner, rather than later, somebody (somebody like me, for instance) will find a way to toy with the unit...take a paper towel soaked in pure ethanol and wrap it around the sensor to indicate a 50% blood alcohol level, particularly to somebody else's car (great practical joke!), or route a tube to the outside of the vehicle so that it only receives outside air, thus never registering alcohol. Oh, sure, this will be made illegal, just like smoking in the lavatory on an airliner and rolling back an odometer. Works pretty well, too.

      In short, yes, this can happen. Be afraid, be very afraid.

      --

      "Make it ten--I am only a poor corrupt official."
      --Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca

    3. Re:I Saw This Presentation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know how these guys think they can get car manufacturers and the American pubic to agree to volunatary constant surveillance via an "air tap".

      Offer insurance discounts. I'd do it.

    4. Re:I Saw This Presentation by Milican · · Score: 2

      Ahh.. I had thought about using the word "ethical" in my sentence but substituted politics instead. Obviously you saw where I was going. I removed the word ethical because I think this device is used to have both good and bad characteristics. The devices intent is to reduce harm, death, etc.. so ethically it passes the litmus test. However, the cost is a loss in civil liberties which could be argued worse than the benefit. That is why I relabeled the matter a decision of politics.

      I would like to reiterate that I completely agree with you from the ethical standpoint. As Engineers of any discipline we have a responsibility to the public. I am an Embedded Design Engineer and I would not work on a project that say made net enabled electrocution chairs so that families could push the button from their big screen TV at a sports bar.. That would be clearly unethical for many, many different reasons. Nor would I work on an alarm sysem that triggered a battle axe to swing from the rafters and pummel someones brains. Or many other slightly less ludicrous jobs. Anyway, thanks for pointing out that ethics and engineering go hand in hand.

      JOhn

    5. Re:I Saw This Presentation by xeromist · · Score: 1

      ooh, "sheeple". I like that term. A very apt description for the outright stupidity of the average American. Apparently, someone forgot to tell America that the media never has our best interests at heart, and NEVER reflects reality. The idea that people do something, just because their TV told them to, makes me sick.

      But you're right, people will stupidly adopt this if it has the proper spin, even if it means they'll lose their personal freedom.

      --
      This sig is exactly seventy characters long and a real waste of space!
    6. Re:I Saw This Presentation by rnelsonee · · Score: 1
      The part about the federal government coercing state governments to encourage this device is right-on. The same thing is happening to the Blood Alcohol Content limits for DWI offenses. It was .10 in many states, now it's .08 (or soon will be) for almost all because the federal government deemed it so. Does the federal government get to regulate BAC levels? Nope, but they do control federal funding for interstates as well as all those wonderful interstates that don't actually go into other states (see City Beltways and Hawaii). So Uncle Sam threatened to cut off funding to noncompliant states. Ugh.



      But I gotta tell ya, this thing is easy as hell to beat. And false positives will come from certain perfumes, or, more likely, drunk passengers. That's (still) legal...


      -- Rick

    7. Re:I Saw This Presentation by Nonesuch · · Score: 2
      Yes, 'sheeple'.


      But the term doesn't just apply to Americans, it applies to plenty of people in other countries as well.


      By the very fact that we have recognized the condition of overly-trusting authority and coined a term for it, it can be said that America has more non-sheeple than other nations.

  94. Reminds me by shpoffo · · Score: 1

    of a thought I'd had a while back to remove ignition keys entirely and have a breath analyser installed. When you bought the car it'd be keyed to your breath pattern at the dealership and you could make provisions to add friends/family at your leisure, you'd just have to back to an autorized dealership. Of course, BAC test would/could be co-implemented. It even seems to be a somewhat reasonable proposal other than the fact that it's a bit creepy.....

    -shpoffo

    1. Re:Reminds me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if you borrow your car to someone?

  95. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by paRcat · · Score: 2

    To quote you...

    this is an unrealistic slippery slope.

  96. A little civil disobedience goes a long way! by FirstOne · · Score: 1
    It would be high time for a little protest action, WTO style.

    The inexpensive tests of alcohol can't tell the difference between the various types of alcohol's.
    You could differentiate between them, if you had a gas chromatography analyzer, but they are very expensive and somewhat fragile.

    Each driver could stock one's car with a little bottle of isopropyl (rubbing) alcohol. Use a little to clean the rear view mirror, and spill a little on the carpet before setting out on that evening's journey. The police would wind up chasing million's automobiles per day, with no convictions to show for it, damned inconvenient. Needless to say, that program would end in heartbeat!

    Note: Their are lots of other sources of alcohol vapors, fermenting fruit, etc..

  97. Too intrusive... by Compulawyer · · Score: 2
    Granted that the Supreme Court has severely limited privacy rights in automobiles (for example, the police can search anywhere within the driver's "wingspan", an area which apparently includes the trunk, despite the driver's (in)ability to reach into the trunk while sitting in the driver's seat), and also granted that drunk driving is stupid, callous, and an extreme hazard to innocent bystanders and other motorists, but this is just a little too intrusive for my taste.

    I think the manufacturer itself recognizes this because the article states it is designed to give police "probable cause" to make a stop. HEL-LO! We're putting a device in your car that essentially searches the content of your body and then notifies a police cruiser in the area electronically so he can have "probable cause"???!!!

    I AM a lawyer, but DON'T do criminal law. However, I believe the proper order is:

    1. Get probable cause; THEN
    2. Stop and search.
    This places the search first and the establishment of probable cause second. The fact that a private party and not the Gov't is respoonsible for conducting the search is essentially a sham in my humble legal opinion.

    There may be circumstances where this is warranted -- as a condition for continued driving privileges after a drunk driving conviction (not using the device to obtain the conviction in the first place, of course) being one of those circumstances. However, there I analogize the device as simply an improvement on the devices already available that lock the ignition until the driver blows into a breathalyzer and proves to be below the legal limit. Again, I am only aware of these ignition lock devices being used after a properly obtained conviction .

    If you go down this road, you will have to make it illegal to remove the device and/or tamper with it. I predict an increased demand for used cars.

    --

    Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

  98. Excuse me? by SaturnTim · · Score: 1


    Okay, so if I'm the designated driver, and taking some drunk friends home, this device gives the police the PROBABLE CAUSE to search me and my vehicle? If driving a drunk home is probably cause, why don't the police just set up check points in the parking lot of bars? I would imagine everyone leaving a bar on a friday night is either drunk, or has one in the car.

    And we get to pay for this "feature"? God, this is evil. What next, manditory speed limiters on cars?

    --T

    --
    http://www.theMediaBunker.com
  99. Re:Stephen King, author, dead at 54 by unitron · · Score: 2

    Apparently they really do let just any old crack head moderate, and a lot sooner than before as well.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  100. This has *nothing* to do with being liberal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anything, it is an overzealous conservative move!

  101. Driving IS a legal right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See the case law, case in question is in 1914(IMMS). The courts ruled that it was a legal right to drive, however it was a limited right. See this guy's site, there's a link if you scroll down. http://www.cjmciver.org/free.shtml

    Remember, the Constitution (which is still supposed to be the law, in theory) states that all other rights are reserved for the people. That includes the right to drive, play catch with anti-matter frisbees, criticise foreign governments (as well as our own), watch DVDs we create on equipment we buy or make, etc.etc.etc.

  102. legal limits. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reason that a legal limit is *defined* is because prosecution would otherwise be very difficult. You can much more successfuly defend an accusation of "the suspect was over the legal limit" than "he was weaving; he couldn't walk a straight line". Without this baseline, no matter how arbitrary it might be, police would have LESS opportunity to successfully charge offenders.

    Now, if all people [who drink] were responsible about it, we wouldn't have to set an arbitrary limit like this - it wouldn't even BE an issue. Unfortunately, many people are NOT responsible, and they climb behind a wheel when drunk, convincing themselves that they're still ok to drive (IMHO these people should never be given a second chance. Ever. Period.). That arbitrary limit, AND/OR the discretionary power of the police, does not keep these irresponsible people off the road!!! AFTER they get on the highway is too late to be thinking about stopping them - they need to be stopped before they get in the vehicle!

    Drinking and driving is just as bad as firing a gun randomly at a sparse crowd of people. You might hit someone, you might not; you might kill someone, you might not. It is unfortunate that DUI/DWI is not an offense punishable by life inprisonment

    Now, if you think i'm overreacting, just think about how you would feel if a loved one was killed by a drunk driver, who still drives, and still drives drunk....

    -Vehemence

  103. Cool! a Brand new market! by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 1

    Ill call my new device BuzzBuster(tm)...
    Ok, not that funny. But if someones gonna say it its gonna have to be me.

    --
    I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
  104. roll down the window! by CrudPuppy · · Score: 2, Funny

    I haven't seen one mention of this technique to
    fool the sensor.

    It is a basic concept of chemistry (osmosis) that
    the concentration of ethanol vapor would be MUCH
    lower with the window open at 0 mph, not to
    mention if
    the car is moving at any respectable speed.

    If you wanna get cartoon-ish, imagine breathing
    through a huge straw out a cracked window :)

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
    1. Re:roll down the window! by Zenjive · · Score: 1

      OR...

      You could just NOT drink and drive. Quite simple, really.

      OTOH, I wouldn't buy a car that had one of these installed. Most mouthwash and breath freshener products contain alcohol. Not enough to get you drunk, but enough to trip up a breathalyzer test.
      How would you like to get pulled over on your way to work for having minty fresh breath?

      --


      A vacuum is a hell of a lot better than some of the stuff that nature replaces it with. - Tennessee Williams
    2. Re:roll down the window! by Dfiant · · Score: 1

      The article says they're testing it with cologne and other products with alcohol in them and none have triggered a false alarm yet.

    3. Re:roll down the window! by lcypher · · Score: 1

      "How would you like to get pulled over on your way to work for having minty fresh breath?"

      I've had the pleasure of messing around with a handheld breathalyzer. One of the weirdest things that we figured out was that a person would blow a .05 to .15 if they had just eaten a cinnamon roll. Maybe somebody has some insight on to why in the world that would happen, but imagine being pulled over for eating a pastry.

      Maybe the cop would just confiscate it and let you go.

    4. Re:roll down the window! by Kn33gr0W · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you guys but when I drink and drive I always have the window down. I've driven with it up before with a sober friend in the car (don't ask why he wasn't driving) and he had to eventually roll down the window saying "It smells like a booze factory in here." I think that this won't work well for quite some time. Even when it can work with the windows down, who is to say that someone won't just disable it?

  105. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly, I don't get why some people insist on certain "freedoms" when by bending those rules you could save many, many lives. YUO == TROLL It's that obvious.

  106. Driving is a RIGHT, not a priviledge. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Constitution and case law both state that driving is a right, not just a priviledge. The Constitution (which is still the law, in theory) states all rights not enumerated within it are reserved for the people. Driving, space travel and video game playing and the usage of computers are all within the rights of those able to obtain the equipment to do so.

    Case law also recognizes that driving is a right, not just a priviledge, as you would claim. Ah, here's the link, and an excerpt (italic is quoted from the link, not this Nanny state advocate.)

    http://www.cjmciver.org/sapf/penndot12.shtml

    I have checked the case you cited, Commonwealth v. Funk (which I found at 323 Pa. 390 (1936)), but it only involved a license suspension matter. Certainly the Commonwealth has jurisdiction over driver licenses themselves, to suspend or revoke them subject to the review of the judiciary. The court in the above case affirms that, but this decision also cites cases that refer to the use of public highways as a "right? not unrestricted" and "limited right".

    1. Re:Driving is a RIGHT, not a priviledge. by Kelson · · Score: 1

      I take it you didn't learn to drive in California, then. They take every opportunity to insist that "Driving is a privilege, not a right."

    2. Re:Driving is a RIGHT, not a priviledge. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i agree, what is the difference between me driving a car and driving a bicycle ? i can buy a bike, i can buy a car. they both get me from point a to point b. one i just a little faster. so are you now going to tell me that riding a bicycle is also a privellege ? our governemnt doesnt own the road, we do. we pay taxes.

    3. Re:Driving is a RIGHT, not a priviledge. by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      our governemnt doesnt own the road

      I agree, but by that line of reasoning we also own aircraft carriers and NASA and the CIA. You try throwing your weight around there and see how far you get.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  107. Error.... by Traicovn · · Score: 1

    Mind you, I don't want to promote drinking and driving, I know that it kills people, and that it puts not only you at risk, but everyone else on the highway.

    But this is too error prone
    It seems that it could pick up someone elses breath accidently. Meaning that if you hadn't been drinking, that your sensor STILL would go off signaling you had been drinking. Sure, a nearby cop could pull you over and verify that you hadn't, but should you be subjected to that? Also, bar tenders, or anyone who might have had some alcohol spilled on them would be subjected to the same type of treatment someone who had been drinking had.
    Even though it's an idea where the intentions are in the right places, it doesn't mean that it's a GOOD idea....

    --

    [Something witty and intelligent should have appeared here.]
    {Traicovn}
  108. Problem is DUI Laws by billmaly · · Score: 0

    This is not only an invasion of privacy, it will exacerbate what I consider the real problem with drunk driving laws. Namely, people who are just slightly over the limit and only slightly impaired will be cited, fined, and pay boocoo insurance premiums. They're name will be in the paper, causing embaressment to their families and risking their careers, simply because they had a 2nd drink after dinner.

    DUI laws treat all offenders the same, and the threshold is becoming lower (.08, not .10, and MADD wants it lower yet!). The person who blows .09 is charged IDENTICALLY and treated the same as the hardcore drunk who can't stand up and blows .40. This is wrong.

    1st timers who blow .15 and below ought to be given a chance to expunge their record and not pay astronomical insurance premiums, call it a one strike rule...you get this privledge once, after that, throw the book.

    My dad got nailed for DUI when I was in Jr. High, me and my family suffered more humiliation and financial distress because of this than my dad ever did.

  109. On the subject of sensors in vehicles... by Prince+of+Jupiter · · Score: 1

    If we really really need sensors in vehicles to call emergency services to help public safety, why don't we have sensors installed that detect vehicle damage at a certain point, and then notify the police and possibly medical services that I have had an accident and need assistance sent? Set up the sensors so that it doesn't happen if someone backs into me in a parking lot, but if I run off the road and completely crumple the front of my car, then my car notifies the police that I need help!

    1. Re:On the subject of sensors in vehicles... by shumacher · · Score: 1

      OnStar does this. It looks for airbag deployment.

  110. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And once all the roads, printing presses, houses, and guns are owned by the government, we'll finally be rid of that pesky bill of rights once and for all! Thank goodness for huge taxes!

  111. Not all that new.... by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    These are not all that new. They have installed in some chronic drunks a breathalyzer in the car and the car would not start if the driver was drunk. Granted, a drunk could find a sober person to breath in it, but if his buddies were all alcholoics they might have trouble! :) I think they need to do something to this effect and or start making the bars more responsible (although not entirely....). Once a person gets visibly drunk, he should not be served anymore. Period. That's only a life saving method.

    Here in Columbus, OH you may have heard of the riots on OSU campus last year and the not so great mayor came up with an idea that with in the city limits (actually this might possibly be a state law too) people were only allowed to buy 4 kegs before they had to sing an affidavit basically telling the cops you were having a party and when and where it was. The smart OSU students got around this though (politicians are SO dumb...duh!). They just divvied up the money and say you get 4 you get 4 and you get 4 and now they have 12 kegs! That's a small OSU party. At one raid (where all residents were underage I might add) they confiscated over 50 kegs of beer from ONE house! There's something wrong with that! The students that the law was supposedly designed to protect or defeat got around the law and the guy who's having a huge retirement party can't go buy 8 kegs with out giving out all of the info!

    --

    Gorkman

    1. Re:Not all that new.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Granted, a drunk could find a sober person to breath in it, but if his buddies were all alcholoics they might have trouble!


      Also if he could find a sober person to commit what's probably a felony for him he could probably find a sober person to drive him home. Not to mention that he'd have to be completely aware of the situation, the danger, and the fact that he was drunk in order to do it. I'd imagine that most drunk drivers aren't that disrespectful of the law, they merely make a bad judgement (for which they should still be held totally responsible).

    2. Re:Not all that new.... by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1
      Granted, a drunk could find a sober person to breath in it...

      They need do no such thing, ever hear of a balloon? Blow it up before you go in the bar; use it to trick the device after you come out.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

  112. No right to privacy in your car by glrotate · · Score: 1

    The Supremes have said so

    1. Re:No right to privacy in your car by elefantstn · · Score: 2

      There is a difference between the right to privacy and the right to no unreasonable searches and seizures. If, without a warrant, the police set up a video camera in your house to tape you smoking marijuana, that's illegal, because they violated your right to privacy. If you're driving along the highway smoking a joint and a cop sees you, they can pull you over, because you don't have a right to privacy in your car. Neither of those situations has anything to do with being detained by an officer with no probable cause for doing so, no matter where you are.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
  113. Re:No more alcohol by unitron · · Score: 2
    Why, is she wearing lick-off tattoos?

    I didn't say pictures of the models.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  114. When was "liberal" redefined? by CrayDrygu · · Score: 2
    Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society... they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves

    Excuse me, but when was "liberal" redefined? You're not the only the only one who's baffled me with this, but you're the latest, so I'm picking on you today.

    I've always thought of myself as very liberal. I've taken a couple of those online tests that are supposed to show your political leaning and what party matches your beliefs the closest -- all have told me I'm liberal. But the idea that I want to be "big brother" and that I don't think people can take care of themselves is utter bullshit.

    Big Brother is the last thing I want to be or to see, sadly it seems we're getting closer every day. And furthermore, I'm a great believer in personal responsibility. I can't believe some of the lawsuits I'm seeing these days, where someone screws up and blames everyone else.

    So what am I now? The opposite of liberal would be conservative, right? And I'm sure as hell not conservative. So what's "liberal" mean now, and what's my new label?

    I'm starting to think this redefining of "liberal" is some far-right strategy to make people think, "Well if that's what the liberals think, I'm gonna start voting for the conservatives!"

    --

    --
    "I personal[ly] think Unix is "superior" because on LSD it tastes like Blue." -- jbarnett

    1. Re:When was "liberal" redefined? by isa-kuruption · · Score: 1

      What is a liberal? How is a liberal a socialist? Well, there are extremes in both. Like, a moderate conservative... which is, a conservative that leans more towards being conservative but has some liberal ideals. The liberal is just a socialist with some conservative ideals ;)

      Examples of WHY liberals are socialists... one would be, Canada. Canada is a socialist gov't and I don't think anyone would disagree. They have this thing called "free public healthcare" because in the socialist ideal, "everyone is the same." This would mean, guy A who doesn't work gets the same medical coverage as guy B who does. Alright? Agreed? Okay.

      Does this not seem similar to the proposed (but failed) healthcare system Clinton advertised to the people in 1992 when he won against G.H.W. Bush? Yes, exactly the same. A free public healthcare system... a very socialist idea!

      Secondly, the tax cut is another example. Again, remember, socialism assumes "everyone is equal." This is why the democrats didn't want the "rich to get more." Just because they earn more doesn't mean they DESERVE a bigger tax cut... this was the view of the democrats. They wanted EQUAL TAX CUTS (for equal people.. *ahem* the socialist philosophy) for everyone in the U.S. So the wealthy would get.. oh the same tax cut as the guy who makes $6/hr. Or, someone who makes $50/hr would get the same amount of money back as the guy who makes $6/hr... this is what the democrats proposed.... again, everything is EQUAL and this is a socialist concept.

      Big brother? One thing you must understand, as a liberal, is that it was a liberal who instituted the DMCA. This is very big brother-ish, no? This was a bill proposed and supported primarily by democrats. The whole idea of "no encryption for the public" was an idea brought up by the liberals, again, a big brother concept... a socialist ideal, that no one is too good to NOT be looked at.. which almost makes it a communist ideal.

      Going back a few years... Roosevelt instituted social security system. Roosevelt was a democrat. In the 1960s, powered by a Democratic congress, the surplus was used to significantly increase the amount of money the average welfare recepient would receive. Again, a socialist ideal and pushing more towards this ideal.

      Ah, on another anti-democrat note, are you aware that the KKK is a bunch of democratic-protestants? Did you forget that Abraham Lincoln, the guy who freed the slaves, was a republican and the guy who assassinated him was democrat?

    2. Re:When was "liberal" redefined? by Nexx · · Score: 2


      Ah, on another anti-democrat note, are you aware that the KKK is a bunch of democratic-protestants? Did you forget that Abraham Lincoln, the guy who freed the slaves, was a republican and the guy who assassinated him was democrat?


      Of course, you seem to believe that the political parties' agendas do not change for over a century.

      Also, what evidence do you present that the KKK is predominantly democrat? Funny, I would've thought that because of who the KKK are, they would not support a party that has large numbers of support in the inner cities, which are now predominantly African-American or Hispanic, depending on the region.

      You're completely confusing communism and socialism, btw. Communism is as you describe, "everyone is equal". The basic tenet of socialism is that the society's role is to help individuals, by spreading the risk of various activities to the greater whole.

      BTW--Clinton may have been a Democrat, but liberal he was not. Scrutinize his policies, and you'll begin to understand.

    3. Re:When was "liberal" redefined? by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      "Clinton may have been a Democrat, but liberal he was not. Scrutinize his policies, and you'll begin to understand.
      "

      He was at heart.
      He perfectly realized that US society is not even close to being ready to support the kind of socialism which is a standard in Europe these days.
      His restrain in pushing his liberal ideas was related to the fact that he , above everything, loved to be in power.
      Just look at what happened during his last days in the office.
      The guy went nuts passing all sorts of liberal regulations.

    4. Re:When was "liberal" redefined? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word "liberal" especially used in a negative way is usually perpetuated by people like RUSH Limbaugh www.rushlimbaugh.com/. Its a way to market a political conviction to Americans who dont know what to believe.

  115. A rule of thumb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I used to own a breathalyzer, but I found the following just as accurate and simpler:
    1. Max 1 drink per hour. Use the clock.
    2. Max 3 drinks for the evening.
    3. No drink for 1 hour before driving. Switch to soda or water.
    That'll cover a typical 4 hour party. If you want to do more than that, don't bring the damn car in the first place!
  116. A cheap commercial solution... by @madeus · · Score: 1

    There was a very cheap commercial solution available in the UK called Blown & Know. You got three use-once-only miniature tubes to blow in (the packet was a about the same size as a condom packet and IIRC, about the same cost).

    The retarted police in the UK refused to back the solution because they said it would just encorage people to drink up to the limit. As the limit is only ~1.5 decent pints of larger that's very obviously FUD.

    Their web site (www.blow-n-know.com) is down, so think they have gone bust.

    (#include I did the web site :).

    1. Re:A cheap commercial solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is that "know" in the biblical sense?

      you crazy brits.

  117. Strong disagreement here... by Millennium · · Score: 2

    Certainly the ability to travel freely is a right. However, the various methods one might use to do this are not rights; all are privileges. Including driving. This is why we require licenses for drivers.

    That said, I still think this is a Really Bad Idea, because it amounts to a search without a warrant. Furthermore, it has no way to tell if the driver has actually been drinking; it just tests for the presence of alcohol, so you don't even have probable cause; that makes it an unreasonable search as well.

  118. How about this... by Fakir · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be easier, cheaper, and more "drinking community" friendly to just disable the ignition system when alcohol is detected? Granted there are plenty of other issues surrounding this that make it scary use of technology, but why not use it proactively rather than punatively. Seems to me that this is very telling of the inventors mindset.

    From my own perspective, I would rather my car give me the hint, "Hey don't drive. Take a cab or wait to sober up" then having a cop do it.

    --
    ---------- Hot Rats!
  119. Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being a liberal basically means you believe in the bill of rights. Paint me a liberal with a wide brush, brother. This guy has obviously bought into the ultra right wing FUD that that they have used the media to force feed us for years.

    1. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it doesn't. That makes you a libertarian. A liberal is one that wants to make a government program to cover just about every facet of a person's life so they do not have to take responsibility for their own actions. In general, liberals are very selective in which items in the Bill of Rights they support based on the sub groups that support them w/o thinking.

    2. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being a liberal basically means you believe in the bill of rights.

      Like, for instance, the Second Amendment?

      Yeah, right!

  120. Important Question by forgeeks · · Score: 1

    How would this *smart* device know if the driver is the one with the bad breath or the passengers? I mean, what if the driver is the DD and the rest are trashed? I see a big problem with this device.

    --
    -- Powered By Linux
  121. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    rolling down the window so the drunk sixteen-year-old girl in the passenger seat can toss her cookies: That's probable cause.

    Probable cause for fun, more like! Woo hoo!

  122. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You fucking moron

  123. Mouthwash by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    Would the sensor go off it you had just used a strong mouthwash, like Listerine?

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  124. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Carpathius · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Why is it that people don't seem to GET IT?


    This device is a gigantic invasion of privacy! "Simply a protection". Sheesh. Let's tap the phones -- you're not doing anything illegal, so you don't care, right? Let's put cameras everywhere -- your home, your office, the streets. If you're not doing anything illegal, then you won't care, right? I mean, it's for your protection!


    Can't you understand that your freedoms are contingent upon you protecting those freedoms, and that the minute you decide to allow one of those freedoms to be taken from you, you create a path for others to be taken? It's already begun. If people won't fight for their freedoms, if they won't fight for the rights and freedoms of others, then we've lost.


    Sean.

  125. Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by hawk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I am a lawyer, but this is not legal advice. If you need legal advice, contact an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.


    I'm stunned. Not that the device existed, but by what they want to do with it. I assumed that the posts here would be the usual ignorant overreaction to taking a line out of context, but it's not.


    This is the most serious threat to American liberty since the proposed flag burning amendment [I support burning flag burners, but an amendment to ban that hateful activity will do more damage to the flag than all the cretins that ever burned it. That flag represents the very liberty that allows them to burn it, and burning it acknowleges that . . . but I digress.]


    I loathe drunk drivers. After a first offense, when the license is eventually restored, the drunk should be required to have a reflective Scarlet D on all sides of the vehicle and a distinctive tint to his headlights to warn us he's coming. On a second conviction, license revocation should be permanent with no future license for anything heavier than a moped. [I *grudgingly* acknowledge that a first offense might conceivably happen to someone from not understanding the levels involved. Grudgingly. Once a person has been through that, though . . .]


    Is it clear enough yet that I want everly last drunk caught and executed?


    That said, this devise is an intrusion at the level that should have common citizens ready to take up arms against the government. This *is* an intrusive search. This is *more* than a little step down the slippery slope to the surveillance of 1984.


    There is a clear role for such technology. When I first started practicing in '89, one of the lawyers from my suite came back confused as to what the judge hade ordered on a drunk. He had gone in expecting a prison term, but the judge ordered "interlock," which he'd never heard before. It was a breathalyzer attached to the ignition system, a damned good idea (add it to my D above :). But this is for a convicted drunk driver.


    Something sampling the air neer the steering wheel would be harder to defeat (though how many people will breath in the tube for their driver???). As a consequence of conviction, such a device is reasonable. But this device is fundamentally flawed in concept.


    Send a little signal to the police? How about *calling* them??? For that matter, the car shouldn't even *start*, or should shut off (after a warning period to pull over). This device is *insane*.


    hawk, esq.

    1. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by ksheff · · Score: 2

      I wondered why they went through all the trouble for the transmitter too. It seems the idea of not having the car start is a better one. Sure, there will be some debate about product liability if someone ever dies because the car wouldn't start (ie attempting to drive drunk person to hospital but can't due to embedded device). However, it won't let the drunks on the road until they sober up. With this proposed device, they can still drive and cause damage. It doesn't do any good unless there is a cop in the area and he's paying attention to his drunk detector.

      Could this device be defeated by having all the windows open and/or the top down if the car is a convertible?

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    2. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by SomeoneYouDontKnow · · Score: 2

      I wonder if this would be a Fourth Amendment violation (unreasonable search). Essentially, your car would be bugged without a warrant. One could argue that this is different because the police didn't plant the bug, but they did listen in. If that's legal, then would it not also be legal for the police to use your cell phone and cordless phone communications against you, so long as they could grab the signal out of the air and decrypt it, if necessary, without a warrant? Would searches like this not fall under the Supreme Court's recent ruling involving the police using sensors to look inside people's houses for heat sources related to drugs?

      If this scheme did go forward, and we must remember that this is just something that a university is playing around with, I can't wait to see the lawsuits fly when the sensor either malfunctions or it activates because a passenger and not the driver is drunk. It'll also be interesting to see what would happen if someone gets prosecuted for disabling the system. If they're prosecuted, then that means the system would be required by law, which would mean that the police would then be allowed to conduct warrantless searches on everyone with a car with no probable cause (remember, the sensor is doing the search). If the prosecution fails, then you'd probably see lots of people disabling it. But what would happen if the automakers rigged things so the car wouldn't run without the system being active? Could they set things up so the system would provide an encrypted message to the starter so it will work, then sue anyone who circumvented it under the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions? And no, I'm not making a joke here.

      --
      That light you see at the end of the tunnel might be from an oncoming train.
    3. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by rtscts · · Score: 1
      It seems the idea of not having the car start is a better one

      If the car doesn't start, they can't milk a couple hundred bucks out of you in fines.
    4. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by Col.+Panic · · Score: 1
      a couple hundred bucks

      In Florida it is more like $500 - plus court fees, community service, suspended license, probation and associated fees, counseling (if the b.a.c. was high enough) and associated fees, and on second offense, jail-time. don't ask

    5. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For that matter, the car shouldn't even *start*, or should shut off

      No, that would be an infringement, because the device would shut off the car even if you were on private property. Traffic laws apply to public roads, simply *because* other innocent members of the public may be harmed by cars. While it is everybodys right to drink, it is NOT anyones right to drive drunk. Nobody has a right to drive drunk on public roads, and there is never a legitimate reason to do so - drivers are adults and know the potential consequences, yet still make a CHOICE to risk the lives of innocent people. On public roads, other people's safety is involved. At places like airports it is normal for *everyone* to be searched electronically for weapons. Is this unreasonable search? No (even though there are definitely legitimate reasons to carry firearms); the airport is a public place where people demand a certain level of safety. Likewise, public roads are also a public place where people may demand a certain level of safety. People have very definite rights on their own private property, but these rights often don't extend to public places. E.g, its the same with smoking in public places. I fully believe that people should be allowed to smoke - as long as they are not harming innocent people. But smoking in public does harm (in fact it provably kills) innocent people. Non-smokers should have the right to frequent public places without being harmed by others (e.g. 2nd hand smoke).

      And I don't believe anyone old enough to drive can possibly even reasonably claim to NOT be aware of the dangers of driving drunk. That is patently absurd. People *know* - they just *choose* to ignore.

      Camera surveillance in public places I am against primarily because, while it may have its legitimate uses, its almost impossible to prevent abuse of the system - I have not seen a single government which has implemented surveillance add any amount of reasonable measures to prevent abuse. And camera surveillance in a persons home is obviously completely out of the question, that is 1984. I believe people should be able to do whatever they want in their own homes, privately, as long as they don't harm others. But a car you drive on public roads is NOT private property - you take your car out onto the same roads shared with thousands of other members of the public, including small children.

    6. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "a car you drive on public roads is NOT private property"

      Just to clarify (this statements reads funny) .. I meant "property" in the real-estate geographical-type territory sense, not in the ownership sense. Obviously people own their cars, so in that sense it is their property, what I meant was that you drive your car onto public property, so it isn't the same as having your own personal little piece of territory carried around with you.

    7. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would searches like this not fall under the Supreme Court's recent ruling involving the police using sensors to look inside people's houses for heat sources related to drugs

      A house is private property, and nobody ever got drunk, started their house, and went out and killed some innocent people with it. A car is something you take out onto public roads, and in public places, where the lives of innocent bystanders may be threatened, people do not have the same rights (you have a right to be drunk in your house, but you don't have a right to be drunk while driving).

    8. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by SomeoneYouDontKnow · · Score: 2

      True, but it comes down to what's reasonable and what isn't. For example, murder is illegal, no matter where it's committed, and one could argue that it's the worst form of crime out there, but, as bad as it is, the police can't search your house just to make sure you haven't killed anyone there recently.

      The problem with this technology is that it represents a warrantless search of every driver of every car equipped with it, whether they're drunk or not. Remember, you're still scanned, even if you come up sober. It's true that the police don't need a warrant to stop a drunk driver, but we expect that a certain level of probable cause, such as weaving or some other form of behavior that indicates intoxication, will be used. With this system, you're searched no matter what, and if you're thought to be drunk, the police are alerted. Essentially, the police get the power to search everyone, without any form of probable cause. And who's accountable when the thing screws up? The police? They'll argue that they were just responding to the signal? The automaker? Where does the buck stop?

      And I think there are two other problems people have with this. First, is it desirable for law enforcement to be too efficient at stopping crime? Suppose that I told you that anything illegal that you might do, no matter what is is, where it is, or who is around, will be immediately noted by the police, and you would have to account for it. Even without changing one law, society has just become a lot less free, at least it will be perceived that way. For an interesting take on this, watch a movie called "The Monitors", assuming you can find a copy. It's a black comedy about aliens who take over Earth. They're benevolent and try to keep people honest, stamp out crime, etc., but humans find their infulence stifling and rebel.

      Second, with this scheme in particular, we're looking at something that could be done with no public input at all. Does our society really want this? Do we approve of it? The automakers are not required to even ask those questions before implementing such a system. And once it's out there, it's much easier from a public policy standpoint for the police to buy their radio receivers and start listening. Essentially, this makes an end run around any form of public debate of the issue, and that's troubling.

      --
      That light you see at the end of the tunnel might be from an oncoming train.
    9. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by meldroc · · Score: 2

      More like $10,000 when you count the fines, court fees, attorney fees, lost work, raised insurance premiums, etc. This is assuming you don't cause an accident. If all you get is jail, legal troubles and $10,000 down the toilet, consider yourself lucky. It's much cheaper than dying or killing someone.

      Incidentally, while I despise drunk driving, I think this invention is a completely unacceptable invasion of privacy. A $100 box with an alcohol sniffer can't distinguish between a drunk driver, a car full of drunk passengers with a designated driver, upholstery cleaner, or a stick of deodorant. The "blood-alcohol" readings from the device will be wildly inaccurate. If I discovered that my new car had one of these devices, I would immediately disable it.

      --

      Meldroc, Waster of Electrons
    10. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by symbolic · · Score: 1

      Camera surveillance in public places I am against primarily because, while it may have its legitimate uses, its almost impossible to prevent abuse of the system

      Public surveilance using cameras entails, in my opinion, a presumption of guilt. The presumption is that you may commit a crime, so we (the government) are going to watch you so that if you do, we'll know about it.

      Yhe government is great at hyping these new technologies (or just simply employing them with little or no regard for constitutional issues) and how they'll help everyone be safe. Just recently, I heard a news report suggesting that while cameras installed at intersections to catch people running red lights have created huge windfalls for local governments, they have NOT resulted in an increase in safety for motorists. I suspect that it won't be long until a few key decisions are made with respect to the legality/effectiveness of these robocop cameras.

    11. Re:Lawyer: when hell freezes over . . . by townmouse · · Score: 1
      True, but it comes down to what's reasonable and what isn't.


      Exactly. Searching a person or vehicle for no particular reason is not reasonable (a bit of a tautology, that). But extracting a single bit of relevant information is. This is much less of a search than, for example, peering through the windshield. Furthermore, the process does not inconvenience the individual, and the information is not likely to be used against them. And if the result is negative, the police don't know the driver's identity, or even that they exist. You would have a much stronger case arguing that mandatory license plates are an illegal search.


      If police are allowed to stop and search vehicles based on subjective 'probable cause', they can, and obviously do, stop whomever they please. The most conscientious cops will stop even the police chief's car if it's being driven badly, the least will pick on people they dislike and/or angle for bribes. As the article explains, the purpose of this invention is to deprive them of their arbitrary power over all drivers, and restrict them to cases where there is demonstrable probable cause.


      Not that I think this is a good idea, as it is obviously intended to increase revenue instead of decreasing accidents. It would be much safer if the driver was informed that they were probably over the limit.

      --
      Ask me if I've been required to disclose any crypto keys.
  126. Ionizer by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    My step-father has an ionizer device it the power-recepticle in his truck. He can be smoking a cig with the windows up (or only down a tiny bit) and I can barely smell them in the passengers seat. Would a device like this render this system in operable? Would our police become lazy & dependent on this device when useing their judgement on puling people over?

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  127. Problem with this in America is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Thought I was innocent until proven guilty and judged so by a panel of my peers? Oh enter this electronic device to judge me guilty and alert the authorities? I swear to all that is holy that I will be driving a beat up old Plymouth Fury or something, because this is bullshit.

    I don't even drink, I smoke pot on a daily basis, but you'll never see me driving. I disagree with this because it is a lame invasion of privacy, in most states a car is an extension of your home. What next... have to breathe into the remote control to turn on the TV? "Sir please exhale slowly into your mouse unti it emits a beep, once you are verified to be within safe limits of (insert whatever moron politicians wants controlled here) tolerance you will be connected to the internet.

    F*uck that.

  128. Re:complex air flows by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
    My job is designing automotive climate controls
    ...
    but when there are multiple zones (driver, passenger, rear, etc) where each zone has its own control, it doesn't work very well.
    Well, simply skirt around the problem by putting two thermostats: one labelled " his " and one labelled " hers ", each with two settings: " too hot " and " too cold ".
  129. Can't sleep, the grammar clowns will eat me.... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    Damn, well, I did just wake up...

    in operable = inoperable

    useing = using

    puling = pulling

    judgement = judgement | judgment

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  130. People will disable it. by slasho81 · · Score: 1

    If people don't want it, they'll be able to disable it. Breaking something in a car is simple as cutting a wire.

  131. possible issues by mirko · · Score: 2
    Suppose alcohol is poured on my clothes...
    • A drunk friend just vomitted on me, this may happen
    • I bought many bottles and one of these has been accidentaly broken

    In both cases, I might smell horrible, this detector might call some cops, waiting nearby.

    If I have some kilometers to drive and as many cops as I saw last summer in San Francisco (maybe 1 car every 200 meters), then does this mean I'll get arrested every time I'll see one or will th efirst one be able to de-activate my sensor to avoid me these annoyances ?
    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
  132. In an ideal world, perhaps. by CorporateProgrammerD · · Score: 1
    Outcome 3... you go out with friends, but you're the designated driver. Their breath causes you to get pulled over. "Ok sir, that's a fine thing you're doing. Get you friends home, and have a safe night." Not too bad, if you ask me.


    Hmmm...you must always have looked acceptable to the cops. You've never worn any unusual clothing or hairstyle. You've never driven an old car through through certain neighborhoods. You've never been guilty of DWB (Driveing While Black.)


    Yes, sometimes it'll be "OK sir, that's a fine thing you're doing..." but a fair amount of the time it'll be "You're all drunk until you can prove otherwise. You're probably doing drugs too. Do you mind if I search your car while we're here?"

    End result is that you'll probably be allowed to go on driving until the next cop stops you. But not until you've spent 1/2 hour or more going through a field sobriety test, breathalizer, submitting to the search, and answering questions. Assuming that you are properly respectful and none of the drunken passengers causes any trouble.


    I can just imagine what that would be like in areas such as Dallas or Chicago or any other metropolitan area where a 15 mile drive passes through 4 or 5 suburbs, each with their own police department. It could take the car with a designated driver an extra hour or two to get back from the bar.


    And all of this is not because of any criminal behaviour. The outcome that I've described is what a law abiding citizen, doing a good thing (being a designated driver), can expect to deal with.

    Yes, we need to deal with drunk drivers. And we don't do a good job of that now. I don't have any answers (other than actually punishing drunk drivers with more than a slap on the wrist), but I don't think this is the solution to the problem.

    --
    To email, do the obvious.
  133. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "government" you say? Have you ever heard of Ted Kennedy? He has more to fear by this device then I do(I don't drink), the government is made up of people, people who drive cars. This is not a "the royal family doesn't have to do it, but everyone else does" type of thing. If they put a pot sniffing device in cars, that's a whole different story :)

  134. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by jkorty · · Score: 1

    There is no `right to a certain extent' about it. Either you do have a right against unreasonable search and seizure under the Constitution, or you don't. Your arguments apply only if there is no such right. If there is such a right, then that right reduces your arguments to vaporous nothings.

  135. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you be opposed to parents putting it in their kids car?

  136. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    This device is a gigantic invasion of privacy!
    But shouldn't you give up that privacy given that a) you're in control of a perfect mass-murder weapon and b) might just be intoxicated? You want to get drunk? No problem! Do it at home! But the moment you get into a car, yes, the law should be able to make sure you're not going to kill somebody! The US of A is too concerned with crime punishment and not concerned enough with crime prevenetion.
    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  137. Concerns by CtrlPhreak · · Score: 1

    Not that I am, or ever will be a proponent of drinking and driving, but there are several concerns about this new device. Mainly the DUI laws are based upon a certain BAC limit. The ammount of alchohol as a percent of your blood level. How much does it take to set the sensor off? A very large person having a glass of wine right before driving, say from a restaurant, will have a very small ammount of alchohol content, but could be still detected on your breath. Likewise, a very small person could possibly be over the limit, and the small ammount on their breath would not set it off. It all depends on the person, and being generalized on a detector built to be a feature of a car at low price probubly could not be made well enough to adjust. Also, the people who do drink and drive will catch wind of this and not buy any car with it installed. It's like the drug assemblys in schools, their optional. The people who they need to be lecturing to opt-out.

    --
    WikiAfterDark.com It's a sex wiki, go now!
  138. This device legitimizes DUI by sbennett57 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So if they hook this device up to your car and you pass, then you can drive, irregardless of your actual level of intoxication!?

    "Yeth occifer I had a cuple of Thrinks, but I pazzed okay".

    I remember a similar argument a few years ago about putting release handles in trunks of cars after several children were trapped. (why were they there in the first place) If a device is installed, then drinking and driving at some level is okay. This is ridiculous.

    And I won't even get into the problem of detection limits of finding ethanol of source unknown (I am a chemist). Either the device will be set very low (with lots of false positives and civil liberty problems) or too high (and only catch the extremely high levels which normally are stopped anyway)

    I think I'll talk about this one with my brother the cop

  139. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Carpathius · · Score: 1
    Depends. Who owns the car? If the kid bought it, then yes, I'm opposed. If the parent bought it, then they can do what they want. (Yeah, I know, it's hard to tell who really owns a car a sixteen year old bought.)


    What I'm really opposed to is the device contacting the police. Not allowing the car to start is a much better solution. That provides as much protection and doesn't violate privacy.


    Sean.

  140. Snorkeling is probable cause... by mister7 · · Score: 1

    hmmmmm...$15 snorkel hooked up to a window clip. Yeah...they'd pull you over regardless (just for being weird).

    However, I'd make a real interesting mobile beer bong!!!

  141. seen this before by reverse+flow+reactor · · Score: 2, Informative
    There has been discussion of this kind of technology in Canada. Except that it would be installed in the ignition sequence of a car belonging to an already convicted multiple drunk driving offender. Before starting the car, the device would require a breath sample. Fail the sample, car does not start. Pass the test, car starts. Noone knows the results of the test except the driver. And the device is only installed on the cars of persons already convicted of drunk driving and the device is part of their sentence.

    As for circumventing the device by getting a sober friend to give the sample: the sober friend might as well drive, if he/she is there to give a sample.

    I for one like the idea of reducing the number of drunk drivers on the road.

    --

    The significant problems we face cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created them. -Einstein

    1. Re:seen this before by TheShadow · · Score: 1

      I have a better idea... just take the multiple drunk driving offender's license away... forever. What's to say that this offender couldn't get into another car anyway? Then, when they get caught driving drunk and without a license, you throw their ass in jail.

      --

      --
      "What do you want me to do? Whack a guy? Off a guy? Whack off a guy? Cause I'm married."
  142. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right.

    What a load of horse dung. Simply because you are driving a car does not mean you have given up your Constitutional rights. Sorry, that's not how the Constitution works. It is in effect at all times always. It is the highest law of the land (higher than the Supreme Court). I'm sure the government will try to wiggle this argument that just cause you're driving a car you don't have a presumption of innocence and thus everyone must install breathalyzers in their vehicles (why wouldn't you want to unless you were guilty). But it's the same (flawed) argument as when copyrightholders claim that because you are viewing their copyright movie on your home machine you no longer have the right of ownership of your home machine and cannot take it apart to see how it works. The powers of government do not go that far. Although you are free to submit.

  143. Simple solution: 433 MHz by wowbagger · · Score: 2

    433 MHz is right in the middle of the US amateur radio band. As an FCC authorized user of that band, this device and it's kin had best not interfere with me, or I will get them shut down. They are part 15, I am part 97, I win!

  144. Ethanol evaporates really quickly... by Beelzebette · · Score: 1

    if you spilled wine on your seat, all the alcohol would likely evaporate within the hour.

    and why would you have an open bottle of wine in the driver's seat anyway?

    1. Re:Ethanol evaporates really quickly... by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      if you spilled wine on your seat, all the alcohol would likely evaporate within the hour.
      and why would you have an open bottle of wine in the driver's seat anyway?


      Someone suggested that it could be spilt on you on your way out of the restaurant. But what about cologne or aftershave? Windshield wiper fluid. Any number of ordinary products could contain enough alcohol to set this thing off. It's not a perfect detector, it's not likely to be improved to anything even remotely reliable for law enforcement, but they'll go ahead and use it anyway. It's stupid, so so stupid.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
  145. What about police cruisers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can they be mandatorally installed in police cruisers to alert drunk cops to eachother?

    I'm buying a 70's model diesel mercedes. Those things are tanks, and some of them have 1 million to 2 million miles on them. I'm guaranteed no big brother electronix in them.

    1. Re:What about police cruisers? by hex1848 · · Score: 1

      yeah, so they can know were to find the booze for the next shift.

  146. Just disable the sensor by lcypher · · Score: 1

    I am sure there will be a plethora of websites with step-by-step instructions on how to disable the offensive sensor for every model of car that installs them.

    The only thing I want my car emitting is exhaust fumes and heat.

    1. Re:Just disable the sensor by Heem · · Score: 1

      Yea pretty simple, put a piece of duct tape over its opening. Oh the many uses.

      --
      Don't Tread on Me
    2. Re:Just disable the sensor by BlueTurnip · · Score: 1
      That would be a great idea until you are pulled over for a speeding ticket or something, and the cop just happens to look over your breath sensor system and finds its been disabled, and you are hit with a big fine, demerit points on your license, and much, much higher insurance premiums.


      Just ask anyone whose been caught with a rader detector in a state where they're illegal. BIG fines!

    3. Re:Just disable the sensor by Heem · · Score: 1

      Having a radar detector, and having a non-working piece of equipment are 2 entirely different things. Electronics fail. these things happen. And even IF they could ticket you for having a malfunctioning onboard breathalyzer, it would not/could not effect your insurance, since its not a moving violation. Nor can having a radar detector.

      --
      Don't Tread on Me
    4. Re:Just disable the sensor by randomgeek · · Score: 1

      In Virginia, and I'd imagine most states where radar detectors are illegal, you're permitted to have one in the car. It's no posession that's illegal, it's use.

    5. Re:Just disable the sensor by BlueTurnip · · Score: 1
      Actually driving with a disabled breathalyzer would be a moving violation. Sure, they can't ticket you if your car is parked in the driveway. Ditto for disabled air bags.


      The radar detector may not be a good analogy, I admit. And laws do vary on that issue.


      As for failing electronics, I think it would be easy to distinguish between a tampered unit, and a failed one.

    6. Re:Just disable the sensor by BlueTurnip · · Score: 1

      Posession in a moving vehicle I think is an offence in many states. Otherwise, you could simply turn off your unit after you're pulled over as the officer is walking to your car.

    7. Re:Just disable the sensor by Heem · · Score: 1

      Actually driving with a disabled breathalyzer would be a moving violation. Sure, they can't ticket you if your car is
      parked in the driveway. Ditto for disabled air bags.


      Not true. Moving violations include things related to your DRIVING not your vehicle. Your insurance doesnt go up because you have a headlight out, but you can get a fine. there is a big difference. Disabled air bags is not an offense. many vehicles allow you to disable airbags for certain safety reasons.

      --
      Don't Tread on Me
  147. Re:Every citizen should be kept under surveillance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that most of these people are missing the big picture here. I concur with the bloke who wrote the parrent comment.

    I am by no means in favor of drunk driving, but this is a blatant invasion of privacy. If we follow the logic above we will be no better off than if we were in prison already.

    REDICULOUS. I cannot believe there is talk of actually making such devices standard in cars. I will rip it out, buy older cars, or leave the county. What a crock.

  148. marketing BS by CrudPuppy · · Score: 1

    you will seriously doubt your opinion if you go
    look at the percentage of ethanol in Listerine.

    the best breathalyzer in the world cannot distinguish
    between Listerine and Jack Daniels (in the same
    proportion)

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
    1. Re:marketing BS by Dfiant · · Score: 1

      I didn't voice an opinion on the topic, I merely stated that it was covered in the article.

  149. Fun Tricks with This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trick 1: Put a few CCs of 151 rum under the sensor. When your friend comes out to start the car, the cops come. He now has to prove he is not drunk.

    Trick 2: Get into the car sober, then put a CC of Vodka under the the sensor, wave it around, then discard the Vodka. When the cops come, prove you have not been drinking and blame it on a bad sensor.

    Trick 3: Get into the car drunk in your driveway. Start the car then turn it off. Wait for the cops to come and prove you drove it drunk.

  150. Better devices already exist by Logic+Bomb · · Score: 3, Informative

    I once read about devices that courts in some state(s?) could order people convicted of DUI to have installed in their cars. It's basically a breathalyzer connected to the ignition system. Before the car will start, one must use the breathalyzer and be under a set limit for breath alcohol content. This is obviously easy to defeat as well, but if you aided a drunk in this manner and someone got injured or killed, you'd be criminally liable for what happened and would be charged along with the driver. Anyway, this sort of system seems much more American to me; only people with previous convictions must prove innocence down the road.

  151. How about this? by radiashun · · Score: 1

    Since it's obvious that this device can trigger false alarms, why not regulate it's use in some way? Instead of having this in every vehicle, why not use it as a penalty for individuals caught driving drunk? I realize this is still flawed (they could just roll down their windows), but it's an idea.

  152. cologne and perfume alcohol != ethanol by CrudPuppy · · Score: 1

    I forgot to mention that I have never seen a
    cologne or perfumed product with ethanol in it...

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
  153. The wrong way... by CaptIronfist · · Score: 1

    They're going the wrong way, we're not looking for
    a technology to arrest people, but a technology to
    prevent them from drinking and driving. Meaning,
    if you're drunk the car doesn't start period.

    If this technology can be converted for this
    purpose, then I'm for it a 100%.

    Chaos: A broken pattern.

  154. Silly idea, but... by dissy · · Score: 1

    So, why have it signal to near by police?
    Wouldnt it make more sense to do something like, oh i dont know, light an idiot-light on the dash and not start the car or something?

    Im all for not having privacy invaded in such a non-proven method as this, but assuming the tech worked exactly as desired (no false alarms, no passengers setting it off, etc) wouldnt the extent of a safety device simply not allow the engine to turn over or something?

    -- Jon

  155. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The stupid "save the children" fuckheads like you are ruining our country by eroding basic freedoms. Ever thought about that, you moron?

  156. Alcohol based cosmetics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What happens when this sensor is in the presence of alcohol based deodourant, mouthwash, aftershave, cleaning agent?? Decide to freshen up in your car and get hauled in by a police roadblock half a mile down the road???

  157. Use a Solvent, get pulled over? by flounder99 · · Score: 1

    Hmmm,
    Lets just say that I am refinishing some furnature and was using large amounts of denatured alcohol to clean off the stripper. (varnish remover not a person) Anyway, I spill some on my clothes during the process. So I get pulled over when I drive to the hardware (nails not computer) store to buy a paint brush? Sounds like a potential law suit to me.

    Flounder

    --
    I don't like .spam. in my email address, neither should you
  158. A fine thing? by Comrade+Brightski · · Score: 1

    First of all, it's quite humorous to see that nowhere in the article does it mention implications caused by rolling your windows down. And what kind of havoc would a convertible wreak on a sensor that's calculating miniscule amounts of ethanol? Hmm..

    But as for the part about being a designated driver, I can't stand the contradictions they send out. In my town, we always got the lectures in high school that went "If you drink, have someone else drive you home." However, The Pig always neglected to mention the second part of that statement.. Have someone else drive you home so we can bust your ass for public intoxication. I've seen friends riding around in the back seat with a perfectly sober driver hauled into the drunk tank. I'm not sure I see the crime in riding around drunk in the back of someone's car.. sure, it's not the best way to live out your life but you aren't gonna kill anybody. So thanks to our friends at TCU, we have drunks riding around with their windows down and people with designated drivers getting thrown in the clink. God bless America.

    --
    "Software is like sex. It's better when it's free." -Linus Torvalds
  159. automaker liability? by mr.ska · · Score: 1
    automakers concerned over liability claims caused by drunk-driving accidents.



    So instead of being "liable" for selling a car to someone who might drink and drive, they'll instead opt to settle out-of-court thousands of times when designated drivers keep getting harrassed by police for being DUI. Wonderful! Now I get to sue THREE corporations; the auto manufacturer, the police, and the manufacturer of the equipment the police are using!



    Rest assured, I will NOT buy any car with any sh*t like this in it. I'd rather restore something interesting and keep Big Brother out.

    --

    Mr. Ska

    1. Re:automaker liability? by other_things_to_do · · Score: 1

      I read the article and it looks like the proponents have overlooked a major source of liability. I have read though the posts and most people have raised the point of false alarms but what about device failures? These detectors will not see general usage simply because neither the automakers or the police will not want to accept the legal responsibility that comes along with them.
      Suppose that a person who is drunk gets in a serious wreck which injures/maims/kills another person. Now also suppose that it is proven that the device failed to detect the drunk driver either due to its design or from device failure. Or, alternatively, imagine that the device is working perfectly and the nearby police officer does not stop the driver for some reason. It seems to me that if either of these instances were to take place, the manufacturer or police would also share some liability, however small, for the accident. The manufacturer would be at fault for making a defective product and the police would be at fault for failing to do their duty. From the plaintiff lawyer's point of view the pool of possible defendents has now grown beyond the driver to the automaker and/or city. Unless automakers and the city are explicitly protected, lawyers will find a way to demonstrate that they are liable. Why? Because automakers and cities have *much* deeper pockets than any drunk driver. Cities and automakers will never get explicit protection on this issue for the same reason.
      Carmakers may be getting sued over drunk driving accidents now, but imagine when they cannot say that the function their product has nothing to do with the condition of the operator. This is why ignition interlocks for DD offenders are mandated by the court; no manufacturer would the liabilty. The police/city would face an enormous amount of exposure as well since they could no longer say that they were not aware that a crime was taking place. This is also why court mandated interlocks don't notify the police directly. These detectors will not see the light of day outside of specific circustances simply because their very design opens up an expensive legal "can of worms".

  160. crazy lawz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    up in canada they're passing a law to have to the cops infiltrate and shut down biker bars

    1. Re:crazy lawz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      up in canada they're passing a law to have to the cops infiltrate and shut down biker bars

      up in canada they're passing a law for just about everything

  161. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by aozilla · · Score: 2

    What a load of horse dung. Simply because you are driving a car does not mean you have given up your Constitutional rights. Sorry, that's not how the Constitution works. It is in effect at all times always. It is the highest law of the land (higher than the Supreme Court).


    It is a little known fact that the Bill of Rights do not protect you from state laws. For instance the supreme court has ruled that states have every right to restrict your use of weapons, despite your constiutional right to bear arms. The first ammendment starts "Congress shall make no law". The 14th ammendment says that states may not "enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States," but the supreme court has ruled that the Bill of Rights is not a privilege or immunity of U.S. citizens.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  162. American Keg = How much beer by hattig · · Score: 1

    In the UK, a keg of beer usually holds 80 - 200 pints of beer. Nitrokegs hold 80 - 200 pints of fizzy beer, btw - buy cask ale instead.

    50 kegs of beer would indicate an illegal brewery! No wonder it was confiscated!

  163. Why don't they just implant them in our bodies... by Mage99 · · Score: 1

    Let's see they could implant a small transponder/gps unit, with the alcohol/illegal drug sensor and a small electrical shocking device so if we drink/eat/take anything deemed "illegal" we can be shocked immediately and immobilized for gestapo pickup and disposal. Numerical tattoos are so cliche anyway.

    --
    We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act, but a habit.
  164. this is a good idea by aozilla · · Score: 2

    This idea in and of itself is not bad, so long as its optional.



    If it were optional, you know there'd be hefty insurance discounts for using it. If or one would love to sign up. I never drive drunk, and I never would let anyone use my car while driving drunk. This was even true when I was 16-24, when insurance companies raise your rates in large part because of the increase in drunk driving among that age group. It would be nice if I didn't have to pay with my money for those drunk drivers, even if I still have to pay with the risk on my life.



    la ya blah da money happiness trying to get past the compression thingy I don't know why it didn't in the first place this is really stupid. Oh... it's the subject? FUCK YOU SLASHDOT.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  165. Canada is worse... by Sergeant+Rock · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... because they are too concerned with making everyone responsible for crimes that they will never commit.

    That is what the suspension of rights is all about. The U.S. has the right idea:
    If someone breaks the law, they are punished.
    This is the essence of the libertarian view of government. People should be allowed to do whatever they want as long as they do not harm others. They should not be attacked by privacy-intruding devices all of their life that verify they do not harm people.

    They should be knocked if they step out of line. NOT for merely existing.

    Rock
    1. Re:Canada is worse... by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, that also punishes the victim for being in the wrong place, at the wrong time. Where's the justice in that? How many stories have you heard about a woman who begs police to do something about an ex-boyfriend, but they can't do anything until he carries out the rape/assault/murder that will allow them to?

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  166. Depends on how its used. by Restil · · Score: 2

    Although I'm not certain its necessary, it depends on if it can be used as evidence. If all it can do is signal a cop that there's a POSSIBILITY of a problem, they can watch the car. If the driver then starts swerving or showing other indications of intoxication, they can then be pulled over and inspected more closely.

    And hey... if a cop wants to tail a car for 30 minutes because there MIGHT be someone intoxicated behind the wheel, at least that's 30 minutes they're not bothering anyone else. :)

    -Restil

    --
    Play with my webcams and lights here
  167. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1
    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right. They can set arbitrary requirements up until the public throws them out.
    So the State can give police the right to pull my car over at any time, for any reason, and perform a comprehensive search of my vehicle? After all, I don't have any rights to protect me from unreasonable search & seizure when I'm on the road, because driving is a Priv-Ledge.
  168. Fun with air hose by wytcld · · Score: 1

    Of course, in your own car you'd just disable the sensors or transmitter (with a discrete toggle to put it back on for vehicle inspection). For rentals, get an acquarium air pump, the air hose that goes with it, some temporary putty adhesive, and a map of where the sensors are for popular models (from the best selling Alcohol Sensor Maintenance Guide). And, while it's still legal, drive with the windows down.

    For extra credit, splice a black box into the transmitter line to send out the license plate code of that car that's tailgating you. Or, if the device uses vehicle registration numbers, start a Website to mine the public vehicle records for acceptible codes, then we'll set our cars to flip broadcast identities like Bond's car flips license plates.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  169. Where do I sign up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can I be a tester for these things?

  170. Do not need Probable cause to stop by Archfeld · · Score: 2

    only Reasonable Suspicion, a MUCH EASIER to achieve state. If your actions as a driver would have a 'NORMAL' person suspecting of alcohol influence then be prepared to get stopped. That said, it is REALLY, REALLY easy to say," I saw the car swerve your Honor, and suspected that the driver was impaired." It then becomes your word against a 'trained, and experienced' police officer and YOU lose unless you have 2 'unrelated' witnesses. Note my experience is limited to California

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  171. Built in Breathalyzer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just have a built in breathalyzer in the car that didn't report to anybody or disable the ignition.

    Just have it there so that people can find out if they're over the legal limit before they start driving. It wouldn't report to anybody, and would still let you drive if you're pissed, but just to let people know if they shouldn't be driving.

  172. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what about up here in Alaska or any other cold place? there's NO way I'm being a designated driver with the windows down in February, when it gets down to -40!

  173. Re:here's an even better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DON'T DRINK.

  174. info: my lonelyness... by LifesABeach · · Score: 1



    Let me see if i understand this.

    I buy a car that can summon a paid professional 'adam henry' whos only job talent is the confrentation of human preditors and other 'adam henrys' who would ambush other humans.

    I already have enough people in my life. =|

  175. The most offensive thing is: by HamNRye · · Score: 4, Funny

    That they expect you to pay to have the device installed in your car. Next they'll expect me to pony up for smoke detectors that detect pot smoke and radio the police.

    Have we forgotten the very important "He who would trade liberty for safety deserves neither"?? As I recall, Oral sex is still illegal as a form of sodomy. When will the government require that you "Blow for sperm"??

    Time to look in to Canadian Immigration....

    ~Hammy

    1. Re:The most offensive thing is: by rnelsonee · · Score: 1

      In response to a couple of these posts, yes, there are breathalyzers available to the public. I played with one for a while, and you learn some neat things (like swishing beer around in your mouth while sober, and then blowing into a breathalyzer puts you at an illegal limit). Also, the breathalyzer-in-the-car is a good device. Yes, you have to pay for it. $115 to get it installed plus a $30+ fee per month so the cops can download data from the device (in MD anyway). But you don't *have* to have the device -- you can always give up your license, which is usually the punishment doled out to repeat or underage DUI offenders. Most are given a choice, take the device and not drive drunk or give up their license (and the state runs the risk of the offender still driving drunk on the streets).

    2. Re:The most offensive thing is: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DUI: ...people also seem to forget that DUI/DWI testing violates the 5th amendment rgarding incriminating oneself. Most states/localities do not require a search warrant to obtain the evidence, but I suppose it could fall under probable cause in SOME cases, but not all.

      Canada: got news for ya buddy: They're far worse off with respect to individual liberty than the U.S. currently is. e.g. it is essentially illegal to even carry a pocket knife in Canada. Actually its legal if you are in a roofed structure, but... Also, I hope that you would enjoy paying ~80% in taxes if you make any sort of good money. Not to mention that Canada has a FAR higher national debt per capita than the U.S. does, and a VERY crappy national health care system for anything other than a cold. Also quite a few areas(rural) have tainted water supplies now, but I guess that would be expected given the age of most infrastructure in Canada, and the fact that the VAST majority of the country is still rural. (FYI: My brother-in-law is a Canadian, and I spend a fair amount of time in Canada.)

      So, we are either going to end up like the Europeans & Canadians, who have no civil rights whatsoever, or we can fight to reverse or limit the trend in the U.S. where the possibility stille exists to do so, and where we have far more personal liberties than any other country in the world. (Well that is unless you are extremely rich and can afford to bribe the locals.)

  176. Heh heh. by Scoria · · Score: 2

    And wouldn't it be ever so slightly ironic if someone 'disabled' the actual breathalizer using the beer they were drinking? (Pour, pour...)

    --
    Do you like German cars?
  177. Geez so the invention doesn't save the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you expect a small group of people to single-handedly solve a problem as old as the automobile? If you call this invention useless, then logically you must also consider overclocking a waste of time, along with computers that play chess and robots that can solve Rubik's cubes. May as well add religion to that list as another "failure", noting all the hate posts for having the word "Christian" in the name of their university. The man who discovered novocaine never dreamed it would be used for dentistry; who knows what puzzle this piece may help solve? And if you mod me down because I used the word overclocking in an unfavorable light, then the credibility of this site is thrown into serious question.

  178. State laws differ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last I heard, the DUI type laws were all made at the state level, not the national level. Many of these laws differ from state to state. The percentage of your BAC that might get you locked up in one state might just get you a dirty look in the state next door.

    Then there are the wonderful states that do not have open container laws. One of my favorite things about driving through Wyoming is being able to legally sip a beer as I go down the road. Well, that and the drive through liquor stores that will make me a mixed drink to go...

  179. No new cars for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With all the stuff they are trying to put into new cars, including MS wince and stuff like this, I doubt I will be able to buy a new car I can live with. That cherry 69 Elco is looking real good, or maybe an older Jag with a 350.

  180. Vulgar analogy but... by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 2

    ... a good point. The more citizens are under scrutiny, the more law enforcement should be too. I think cameras/mikes in all police cars & stations, covering not only in front of the car (good for police officer safety) but inside as well (good for arrestee safety). Cops usually can't get away with outrageous abuses any more, but only because the "blue wall of silence" is not 100% impermeable.

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
    1. Re:Vulgar analogy but... by Cyno · · Score: 1

      Could we just start with cameras in EVERY government facility, court room, congress, military, etc? Like they'd ever go for that. However, I am shocked they don't allow cameras in all court rooms as it is. I thought justice was supposed to be blind. Except when it smell money, eh?

      But in the end all of this spying, over analyzing, and destruction of privacy is just going to make people crazy. They won't have anywhere to go to be themselves without worrying about breaking a law they didn't vote for or stepping on someone's toes. Why can't we just expect everyone to behave responsibly, like adults, when they are in public and respect their privacy (at all times), instead of turning the world into a child-safe playground o commercialism and irresponsibility. If anyone caught driving under the influence lost their license permanently, and their car if caught driving w/o a license, then they wouldn't drink and drive, or at least they wouldn't drive. Its a privelege that's too valuable for most of us to give up for a few drinks.

      But our laws are too weak, punishment not harsh enough, and its so much easier to punish everyone than screen out the bad ones. Hell, maybe we should just make it illegal to ingest anything that has not been classified as an acceptable food source by our government. It should be illegal to smoke cigs or drink alcohol or eat wild mushrooms or garden vegetables. It should be illegal to talk to someone without their permission or to drive without all the proper identification, registration and licensing present when you enter your vehicle. In fact you should have to pay a monthly fee to have this privelege of driving, where your car asks for your credit card instead of your key. We all need to be monitored while we are shopping and working and playing at the park. We need to pad those big metal light poles so people don't get hurt when they run into them (or at least educate people so they know it'll hurt them if they run into a big metal pole). We should force parents to take tests before having children, to insure they won't kill their offspring or eat them or anything. We need guidance because we can't think for ourselves. Please help us oh mighty government. You know what's best.

  181. at least it presents another option by call+-151 · · Score: 1
    One current problem with taking someone's licence away is that in our "car-centric" society this is seen as a drastic step, and thus is generally only given to more serious offenders. A device like this presents the possibility of a "middle- ground"- hey, you can drive, just not with the same liberty as someone who has not already shown that they are suceptible to drunken driving. Given three choices
    1. Judge takes all ability to drive away.
    2. Judge takes ability to drive without the intrusion (of this device) away.
    3. Judge does nothing, "probation", etc.
    It seems like if people who previously got #3 instead of #1 (happens often- "oh, I need to drive for my job, honest, it will never happen again") sometimes get #2, that is an improvement for the overall driving public.

    In theory, driving is a privledge not a right. But in actuality, so many people are so dependant upon their cars that taking away the ability to drive is seen as unreasonably severe punishment, and thus not doled out as often as perhaps it should be. The number of people who drive anyway after their license has been taken away is large- if there are restricted levels of driving (only alcohol-fume-free driving allowed, daytime driving only allowed, only allowed to drive to work or taking kids to school) then with reasonable enforcement, things could improve.

    --
    It's psychosomatic. You need a lobotomy. I'll get a saw.
  182. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by fhknack · · Score: 1

    No, I have two fundamental disagreements with your argument:
    1)you're saying that the end (getting the drunk bastard off the road) justifies the means (tossing out already eroding bedrock civil protections from privacy invasions and police states).
    2)That things will go as you've stated in the scenarios you've listed.Outcome 1. Nah, chances are that unless I'm really smashed, I'll get home just fine. I don't know very many people who haven't driven when they shouldn't have at some time or another, but I know exceedingly few that have ever had even the slightest mishap from being a beer over the (shrinking) legal limit.

    Assuming that all drivers are potential drunks and should be tested is different from the assumption that all men are potential rapists and should be castrated only in scale of consequence.Outcome 2. If the cop hadn't been in my car where he didn't belong, I probably would have made it home, paid for my crime with a mild hangover, then gone on back to work the next Monday working on that breakthrough vaccine to protect your kids from spacemumps. My life wouldn't be disrupted and I could still afford to keep my poor sainted old mother fed well enough she could stop foraging in dumpsters.Outcome 3. I'll give you this one. If you're white, clean cut, and not in a neighborhood in which you "don't belong." I don't know how it is where you drive, but I don't have to go too far down the road from where I am to find that being black is reason enough to be pulled over, and being pulled over is reason enough to be searched.When I drink, I tend to drink at home. My friends frequently crash at my place rather than driving. Drinking and driving is inarguably a wrong. But from a US Constitutional perspective, it is far, far less of a wrong than this proposed alternative. It ain't just my freedoms I'm trying to protect, buddy. It's also yours those of the other folks who can't look past the emotion of the potential consequences of the crime.The bottom line here is that drunk driving is a social problem--and one I believe is actually getting better--not a technical one to be solved by virtual jack-booted thugs in the steering wheel.

  183. Why signal the police? by KhanReaper · · Score: 1

    Why signal the police? Just disable the car! Don't let the starter or distributer get power!!!

    --
    Even the Politburo concurs with Process of Elimination http://process-of-elimination.net
  184. careful about those generalizations by sg3000 · · Score: 2

    > Because the liberals/socialists want to be the "big brother" of society...
    > they don't believe in people taking responsibility for themselves.

    Careful about those generalizations and stereotypes. That's what they do in Russia! :-)

    I don't think it's the Liberals who are trying to outlaw abortion, legislate what consenting adults can do in their private bedrooms, outlaw free speech (like burning a flag to protest your government), legislate their religious beliefs into public schools, another other acts of increasing the size of government interference.

    Big Brother is where you look for him.

    Back on topic, I'd rather see something like this installed in the cars of people who have been convicted of driving under the influence (and make it a low standard, too). I think it's more common that people who DUI, do it habitually, so it makes sense to have the technology to monitor them. But putting something like this in cars as a matter of course is unnacceptable.

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    1. Re:careful about those generalizations by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      "legislate what consenting adults can do in their private bedrooms"

      How ?

      "legislate their religious beliefs into public schools"

      You mean, allow kids to pray which for which they can get in trouble now ?
      Allow them to even mention God in their own essays ?
      You have no idea how far this "separation" has gone in recent years.
      You can get in trouble for even mentioning God in classroom discussions.

    2. Re:careful about those generalizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think it's the Liberals who are trying to outlaw abortion, legislate what consenting adults can do in their private bedrooms, outlaw free speech (like burning a flag to protest your government), legislate their religious beliefs into public schools, another other acts of increasing the size of government interference.

      May I point out, Nevada, probably the most Conservative state in the Union, has legal gambling and prostitution.

      Just try that in Massachusettes!

    3. Re:careful about those generalizations by ksheff · · Score: 2

      That depends. If one equates the percentage of Republicans with how conservative the state is, then according to this article, that title probably belongs to Idaho. Nevada is probably pretty conservative like Utah and some of the other neighboring states if the big gambling areas like Vegas and Reno are not taken into account.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    4. Re:careful about those generalizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My point is this: I was responding to a post where the poster was characterizing Conservatism as being defined by the religious right. Conservatism is a political philosophy advocating limited government and low taxes. In that respect, Nevada is the epitome of a Conservative state. It is important to disginguish between an economic/constitutional Conservative (borderline libertarian, or Classical Liberal) and a cultural Conservative. The same word gets used to describe both, and they both usually vote Republican, but the only thing they really have in common is a dislike of the left (collectivists in varying degrees). But as a political philosophy, there isn't anything that makes a Conservative inherently a religious fanatic or a moral cretin. Personally, I'm an agnostic. ;-)

  185. Of course not by Cyno · · Score: 1

    If you disable the ignition it would make it difficult to drive until you were sober. Thus avoiding the DUI and hefty fines to your local government of choice. We don't make these things to help you, but rather to help us take your money and get you off the road.

    1. Re:Of course not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That why you have to be a _Master Of Drunk Driving_ or MoDD. After years of experience driving drunk, nobody can even tell that I'm intoxicated. Never been pulled over, even when I've tested at .20 on the breathalyzer at the bar and still drove home.

      The way I look at it, people (sometimes purposely) run over squirrels, possums, racoons, cats and dogs all of the time. So what if I run a person over while drunk driving? They probably have killed an innocent animal before so they deserve pain and/or death.

  186. Okay, just because we can do it... by BenSnyder · · Score: 1

    What's the point of this? To put more people in jail? To increase the coffers of local governments? It seems to me that alerting the police is unnecessary... why not just tie the receptor to the starter and prevent drunk drivers from being able to start their car? That way no one goes to jail and no one gets hurt. Geez, the job of technology like this should be to safeguard society, not lock it up.

  187. Oh great. by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

    "Hey buddie, I'm really messed up. Can you give me a ride home?"

    "No way dude, all that booze on your breath will set off my car breathilizer thingie and I'll be a cop magnet"

    "What do you care? You're not drunk. The cop will just let you go"

    "...but I'm so high"

    --
    The Internet is generally stupid
  188. what's wrong with drink driving anyhow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everybody is like "I hate drunk drivers, they should be jailed forever, but..."

    You're just victims of a very effective propoganda campaign. A few years ago, you would have said the same about communists, shit - maybe you still do. The fear and hatred that this produces is very useful because it allows random stops, and increased police power. Now it's so well entrenched they think they can get away with shit like this.

    Yeah, yeah, now I'm gonna get some sob story about "damn you to hell, bitch, my sister was killed by a drunk driver"... bla bla bla

    Well, what if the driver hadn't been drunk, does that mean we should ban cars ?

    Drunk drivers kill more people than sober drivers. Then again, male drivers kill more people than female drivers, so should we ban male drivers ? People under 25 are 4 times as likely to be responsible for a fatal accident. Should we raise the legal age to 26 ?

    There's a cost/benefit thing here. Drinking is fun, driving is useful, sometimes the two are going to coincide a little. That doesn't necessarily hurt anyone. You hear that statistic about "the average drunk driver drives 100 times before they get stopped", as though it's a good argument for stiffer penalties. So fucking what, that just means most the time when someone drives drunk they don't crash into anything.

    I think that we should make the driving test much harder. The US driving test is a joke, at least, the California one is. Also, they should have harsher penalties for driving like a fuckwit, cutting people off, drinking a 3gallon soda while arguing with the kids, etc.

    Several proposals for greater sanity:

    1. People should be able to take their driving test in various states of inebriation. You could have a driving license that says "licensed to drive class A vehicles after 4 beers and a bourbon".

    2. Certain times should be "designated drunk driver" times. Like 12.00-3.00am on Fridays and Saturdays. Then any sober person would use the roads at their own risk. No ambulance services would operate during this period. If people kill themselves, that's their decision.

  189. Subvert it. by buttahead · · Score: 1

    So the guys that want to drink and drive will just break the transmitter. Lazy cops will stop pulling over slightly swerving cars that aren't broadcasting "hey! my driver is drunk", and we'll still have the same number of alcohol related accidents.

    Technology tends to make people lazy. Do you really want our cops getting more lazy?

  190. Re:nerds have bad breath by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put hte fuckin' lotion in the basket!

  191. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need to declare a nation wide 6:00 pm police curfew. Nobody will be allowed outside of their homes after 6:00 pm without a permit. This will keep drunk drivers, muggers, rapists and their potential victims safely inside during the hours when most crimes occur.

    Hey, it'll save lives, right?

  192. $0.25 Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All this nonsense about cutting wires, protesting via self-immolation on the steps of Cogress, etc. are a waste of time

    Just put a peice of Scotch Tape over the air intake for the sensor. Duh! Problem fixed.

  193. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While they're at it, why don't they start adding the DNA signature of the respective owner to guns, bullets, knives, scissors, pens, baseball bats, hammers, glass bottles, icepicks, screwdrivers, etc.. After all, they're potential murder weapons and the law should be able to make sure that nobody gets killed.

    How about law enforcement monitoring devices in your house that are paid for by the real estate company or local government? After all, someone could break into your house and kill you. Like you said, the law should be able to make sure nobody gets killed.

    How about a device that makes sure you can't let your dog off of a leash while outside or it delivers a fatal electric shock to the animal. After all, a loose dog could kill a person and the law should be able to make sure nobody gets killed.

    How about mind control devices implanted into every person at birth that makes sure they never have any "bad thoughts". The law should be able to make sure nobody gets killed.

    Honestly, you're way too tightly wrapped. Go out, get drunk and get laid. Might help with your little problem.

  194. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you've never jaywalked, gotten stoned, been in public while drunk, ashed a cigarette out of your car window, jogged/skated/biked on the sidewalk or spit on the sidewalk? These are all illegal activities and you should be busted if you have done any of them.

  195. Rev. Jimmy Swaggart to test prototype by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reverend Jimmy Swaggart has agreed to test the blowjob detection device without compensation, seeing it as his duty to "a higher calling".

    "Before we start today's sermon, entitled 'What Ned Did',..." - Rev. Lovejoy

  196. public safety VS. cha-ching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with a DUI/DWI conviction costing upwards of $2000 a pop, this seems to be a cash cow in the making. but at least it will only target people who have enough money to buy a new car in the first place!

    while i'm not -totally- against the idea i
    can see the potential for abuse.

  197. Someone at TCU needs a good spanking by leereyno · · Score: 2

    I don't know much about TCU, but the name Texas "Christian" University is enough to spook my all by itself. How much you want to bet that part of the reason this was developed was because someone there would like to see the Volstead act reinstated? Lets not forget that it was "christian" busybodies that brought us prohbition in the first place along with all of its resulting problems, organized crime not least among them.

    Lee

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  198. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Tackhead · · Score: 2
    > See me weaving, driving too slowly, chugging a beer behind the wheel, mowing over little old ladies with walkers, or rolling down the window so the drunk sixteen-year-old girl in the passenger seat can toss her cookies: That's probable cause. Driving through town with invisible vapors in my car is not.

    "Would you mind if I searched your car, Citizen?"
    "Do you have probable cause, sir?" "Yeah, I do. You got a problem with that?"
    "Then you don't need my permission, sir. May I ask what the probable cause was?"
    "Yeah, you gots invisible vapors!"
    "How do you know the vapors are there, sir?"
    "Look, shitforbrains, I seen! Just 'cuz they're invisible don't mean I don't know they're there. They train us for that in cop skule!"

    *that's all I remember, apart from him pulling out a billy club, and then everything went black*

    "Yes, Your Honor. The defendant admits he lost consciousness during the routine search. We submit this as further evidence that he was intoxicated. Besides, we found all these drugs that we planted, uh, I mean, that he had hidden in the dashboard of in his car. He denies all knowledge of those too. Claims we must have planted 'em after beating him unconscious. But all the drunks say that."

  199. Unfortunately, she's not allowed ... by Sergeant+Rock · · Score: 1

    ... to defend herself.

    If people in this wonderful land were allowed to defend themselves, she'd put a hole in his head when he came 'round and that would be the end of the useless sack-of-shit.

    But she can't. So she won't. She won't even be allowed to buy a can of pepper spray to defend herself from him, because she has to sign a legal notice at purchase time saying she will never use it on a human being.
    Canada
    The country where you are trained to take it. Whether from your fellow man or from your government.
    Rock
  200. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Felinoid · · Score: 2

    But shouldn't you give up that privacy given that a) you're in control of a perfect mass-murder weapon and b) might just be intoxicated?

    No you should not...
    Those freedoms exist for a reason.
    Let's take the automatic camras that take pictures of cars that cross the red light.

    How could you object to that? I mean it's just a way to catch people crossing the red and thats all it dose.

    Well.. no... the camras are defective.

    They fire off on the yellow and green as well as the red.

    There is the problem. With automation you have defects. With defects you have innocent people getting tagged. Even if there is a way to challange the machine somebody is going to trust the machine anyway.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  201. actually... by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    at least one car company (GM I think) makes a climate control with one absolute temp control for the driver and an offset for the passenger. It works...marginally.

    --
    science is a religion
  202. Hrmm by NitsujTPU · · Score: 2

    Drinking at all? Surely this thing can't tell if you're over the legal limit. I can't imagine a cop pulling you over because something said you might have had one beer and you were driving perfectly, breathalyzing you and releasing you. Sooner or later someone will file police harassment if that's the case. Why not just put a warning light on the dash!

    Hell, what if a TCU student takes communion and starts driving!

  203. Could be construed this way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or it will tell you if a passenger in the car has been drinking, which (last time I checked) isn't against the law.

    Drunk passenger == public intoxication

    Having drunk passenger in car == harboring a known criminal -> you're now committing a crime because you didn't report him to johnny law

  204. It shows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recent Engineering grad from Texas A&M University and I saw some...

    Yes, your grammer really shows that you recent grad from A&M.

  205. Why Stop Here... by corecaptain · · Score: 1

    How about a card reader where you have to swipe your license to notify police if you are wanted
    or have traffic tickets, next you could add a
    video camera so your image and that of occupants
    could be matched to database of those with warrants. Hell why not go the whole way and
    require us to all wear a device broadcasting a
    unique id with gps so anyone's whereabouts could
    be determined in real time....GIVE ME A BREAK

  206. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by ryanwright · · Score: 2

    It should be mandatory that all cars have these devices once they've been tested to be highly reliable, and not sending out 'false positives' on aftershave, etc.

    Great idea. While we're at it, why don't we put recording devices in your vehicle as well? That way if you say specific words ("bomb", "drugs") the police are notified. Or how about other sensors to make sure you don't violate any traffic laws? Exceed the speed limit, pull too many G's in a corner, accelerate too quickly, don't come to a complete stop at a stop sign, or violate any number of other laws and you get a ticket in the mail. We could even put sensors in your toilet, so if you take a piss after smoking a joint or eating a poppyseed muffin, the police can come confiscate your contraband and throw you in jail - we all know that drug users are violent, dangerous felons. Hey, if it saves thousands of lives each year... ::rolleyes::

    Look, I dislike drunk drivers as much as the next guy, but I also dislike this big brother mentality. I don't even drink, but I still don't want the government watching what I do. It's none of their damn business. Quite frankly if I purchased a car with this bullshit installed, I'd yank it right out. Anyone with even basic automotive skills can bypass something like this.

    Finally, you're forgetting that we live in the USA, supposedly the land of the free. If you want to live in a safe society controlled by the government, move to China. I'm sure they'd love to have you. But don't fsck this country up; I for one enjoy my freedom.

    --
    -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  207. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Cyno · · Score: 1

    Why don't we just execute everyone with a DUI so we don't have to deal with them again?

  208. Who needs the cops in the loop? by Man_Holmes · · Score: 1

    I can see it now. They post these receivers around the city. You drive by and they record your vitals like drivers license number and breath alcohol. Two remote cameras grab a picture of both the driver and the cars license plate. You open the mail a day later and there's a summons to appear in court on drunk driving charges. If you don't show up then the cops are called out. Tell me if you don't think that the Madd crowd aren't meeting with their legislators about laws to put this is action. Smart money will soon be shorting the stocks of the alcohol vendors. Man Holmes

  209. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1
    I wasn't saying that you wouldn't be able to drive your car without one... If you feel like yanking it out, fine, I say don't make laws prohibiting it. I guess mandatory was a bad word to use. Better to say: default install, but you can even request a car without one. OK, fine, so make it an optional feature.

    Oh wait... if we do that then we should make all drugs illegal, because not everyone uses them irresponsibly, right? See, there's gotta be a medium that we all agree on, or else things dive into mass anarchy, where no one is in charge and everyone does whatever the hell they want to, or the flip side: totalitarian big-brother dictatorship. Don't fly off the handle so fast, dude. I was just argueing FOR implementing a safety device for once. I don't like big brother either, but you can't seriously believe that police and those in authority are ALWAYS out to get you can you?

  210. Religious fanatics, not socialists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    TCU is a college for Church-of-Christ religious fanatics who want to bring back prohibition. You won't find a liberal or socialist anywhere on campus -- unless running for his life.

    A libertarian can be either conservative or liberal. It's a different political axis, without much correlation.

  211. While onthe subject of driving and drinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the is bull about road checkpoints. I mean really. People are gonna drink and drive on the holiday weekends or anyweekends...if you cant catch em doing and cant put enuff manpower on the streets well find a better way. Bothering me on my way to my parents house when I am dead sober and with in my rights is bullshit. America has gotten to damn prevention minded...you can prevent everything.

  212. Pressumption of guilt by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2

    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right.

    So? We have rights that transcend the whims of the DMV, decisions of state government, and federal government. Actively installing these things and making them mandatory, e.g. illegal to bypass, presumes the person is guilty which can easily be argued is unconstitutional when people are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.

    We dont limit cars to 65mph at the factory for that same reason, even though there's a lot more speeders than drunk drivers. We also don't install remote shutdown devices so police can pull us over against our wills.

    About the conviced DUI driver, a judge can pretty much sentance whatever she likes in a lot of cases. I could really see this as being installed into the offender's car, though I'm pretty sure devices like this already exist.

  213. Good way to meet friendly police officers by Notorious+Coward · · Score: 1

    Tape a cotton swab soaked in ethanol up to the sensor (cleaning/or religious purposes).. Sit back and wait for police harassment (who's harassing whom?).

    Drive around a busy city around 2:00 AM. Repeat every night.

    I'm pretty sure if a bunch of people were practicing this, the device would be deemed unreliable.

    Note: You shouldn't drink while performing this task.

  214. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2
    Bad argument.
    With automation you have defects.
    Lord knows that People have No Defects! Their judgement is infallable!
    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  215. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by nikster · · Score: 1

    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right. They can set arbitrary requirements up until the public throws them out.

    hmm... i can't imagine that. isn't freedom of movement a guaranteed right? if freedom of movement of persons (me) and property (car) is a basic right, then driving is a basic right also. one could argue. IANAL.

  216. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As for those who would claim invasion or violation of Constitutional rights, uh, driving is a privledge, not a right. They can set arbitrary requirements up until the public throws them out

    Yes, I can't see that this concept is really bad (as passionate as I usually am about privacy/surveillance etc). Drunk drivers kill people, period, and nobody has a "right" to drive drunk on public roads. Drunk driving is a choice - people choose to drive drunk, and then kill innocent people. Society collectively chooses to impose certain laws in designated public places specifically to ensure the general wellbeing and safety of all of its members. Because cars so easily kill and hurt people, society collectively agrees upon many rules relating to driving in public places ... as long as those rules are in the interest of everyone's wellbeing, the public should support them. Drunk drivers leave people in wheelchairs, create orphans, kill peoples' children etc .. moreover people who willingly choose to drive drunk are adults and *know* the possible consequences .. its nobodys "right" to do. Moreover, this isn't quite the same as camera surveillance in public areas, I don't see a potential for abuse.

  217. do they really do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally think those darwin fish are dumb, but you should still be able to have them on your car without getting pulled over...

  218. Not so terrible, possibly by error0x100 · · Score: 1

    The system doesn't automatically convict you, it just possibly alerts nearby police, in which case you would almost certainly be pulled over, at which time you could explain the situation and undergo an actual breathalyser test if necessary.

    Now if the system automatically connected to a central traffic offences database and listed you for drunk driving, THAT would be a real problem. In the future authorities will probably be relying more and more on computers for assistance, so it is not unthinkable that future systems may attempt to do this.

    Quite frankly I'm not opposed to the basic concept, as long as it remains simple. Drunk driving is not a right. Drunk drivers kill innocent people on public roads.

  219. the most annoying part by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2

    According to the article, the researchers received NSF funding for this. So your tax dollars are going toward development of a device that can run roughshod over the Fourth Amendment. Nice.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  220. Drunk Driving by spachev · · Score: 1

    I have always wondered about "Do not drink and drive". If you drink at all, is there a guarantee that you will be wise enough not to drive afterwards? To me, staying away from alcohol completely is a much better solution. You will be a lot healthier, and you will not do the stupid things that people do when they are drunk. When you are drunk you are not quite yourself, and yet you are still legally responsible for your actions. There exist a lot of ways to entertain yourself without losing your dignity through alcohol.

    --
    MySQL Developer
  221. privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dont think the public will ever go for this. It is like putting cameras in your house to monitor for any illegal activity. a car is an extension of your personnal space and should not be invaded by outside things. has any one heard of the idea of using gps to calculate a cars speed and slow it down when it breaks the speed limit. A rental car company actually fined people for speeding in rental cars. A judge overturned the bills because the people where not awre of it. pesonally im scared. any one know how many dui charges are brought against people driving brand new (probably high end ) cars.

  222. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

    I think the argument goes that all the roads are government property, therefore using them means you signed an EULA which gives traffic cops the right to break your bones and search your rectum for crack and whatnot. Of course, this implies that you can drive offroad with more alcohol than blood in your system...

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  223. would be good if.... by kurlee · · Score: 1

    ... city, state, and local law enforcment and politicians had 'em in thier vehicles. ;)

  224. Believe me, these things won't work ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because when I am driving drunk*, I am driving with as much fresh air circulating through cabin as possible, even if this means wearing a jacket and keeping the windows open. Unfortunately, if you are driving drunk in North Dakota in the winter,I guess these things will represent a major hassle.

    * As in legally drunk. Legal drunk and being drunk are not necessarily (or possibly remotely) the same thing.

    Everybody is so damn concerned about drunks. What about tired drivers? If I compare the amount of time that I have driven after drinking any amount of alcohol to the time which I have driven while on the edge of sleep there is simply no comparison. Nobody talks about what to do about sleepy drivers. But wait! If we make it illegal to drive while tired then where will it end? How many millions will be crimials then?

    While the campaign against drunk driving was, and is is well intended (and certainly has had positive results) the DUI paranoia in this country is out of control. Get this, life is fragile. If you cannot bear the thought of a loved one getting injured or dying then don't have loved ones. Humans die because they are only human. Humans kill other humans because they are only human.

  225. My thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't get me wrong - I'm all against driving drunk, but as I read about this privacy-invading piece of electronic crapola, here's what's been bouncing around my head:

    1) Radio jammer... Transmit nothing, or pick the VIN of someone you really hate and transmit that.... Every car's VIN is easily readable from the front windshield...

    2) Radio transmitters to transmit random VINs - battery powered and left on curbside or in a trash bin just outside of a popular bar... make the cops insane...

    3) Squirt bottle of alcohol... See a car of someone you don't like with the windows down? Spritz, spritz...

    4) Caulk...

    5) Duct tape

    6) Scotch tape

    7) Oh #4-6 are illegal? OK, then insert DIRT - sorry officer, but I'm a slob...

    8) Static electricity.... guess I forgot to wear the strap and fried the device...

    9) Fuse removal...

    10) In case #9 results in a backup circuit broadcasting that I did this, well, #8-9 on the backup will work too...

    11) Tear out the box, destroy the PLC with your VIN in it, toss on Police station lawn...

    12) #11 only sent in a box, postage due, to the CEO of the wonderful company that made the junk to begin with...

    13) Trade the boxes with your friends... Go out driving with someone completely hammered in the car... VIN gets xmitted... But what's xmitted doesn't match the VIN of the car... Case dismissed! FUD thrown into reliability of system... removed...

    14) Will a healthy dose of Scope or other mouthwash set it off? I always keep a small bottle in the glove box so I can rinse out b4 visiting the girlfriend :-)

    15) Guess that 10 yr old bottle of Polo that fermented into alcohol spilled...

    16) Damn bag boy at grocery store mispacked my wine bottles - they spilled all over...

    17) Reprogram the PLC so it's stuck in "this driver isn't wasted" mode...

    18) What? The wire from the sensor has a new resistor soldered into it? Wasn't me!

    19) Remove front seat... sit in the back (Geo Metro...) - aobut 19" away...

    Any others? Bueller? Anyone?

  226. Got it backwards. by Minupla · · Score: 2

    Having stopped at 3 road checks tonight, I'd have willingly submitted to a breathalyzer in my car to have it flash a "driver is clear" signal to the police at the check point and get waved through.

    From a practical point of view, this would allow the police to set up more roadblocks because they wouldn't need to check each driver, only those drivers who didn't volentarily choose to take the breathalyzer when they got into the car this evening.

    Obviously I am allowed to submit myself to a search. Eventually all sober drivers would as a matter of course turn their breathalyzer on when they get into the car, and the cops just need to sit at the side of the road and pull over cars that don't have the all clear signal broadcasting. Which since it's a roadblock that pulls over all cars without a all clear signal, itn't an unreasonable search (at least in the jurisdiction I live in) and we reach a luddible goal (a drastic reduction in DUIs) without unduely impacting people's rights.

    OK, flame away!

    --
    On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
  227. there's a worse idea by townmouse · · Score: 1

    Instead of lowering the limits to where everyone is breaking the law
    The last I heard, most people, most of the time, have a blood alcohol content way below .08.

    --
    Ask me if I've been required to disclose any crypto keys.
  228. Hate drunk drivers? Move to Texas by Caez · · Score: 0

    Come on down ya'll and meet up with ZERO TOLERANCE. Alchol+Blood+Driving=DUI NO MATTER WHAT!!!!

    --
    http://www.mistersampo.com
  229. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by erlenic · · Score: 1

    Yes, this is an unrealistic slippery slope. It's extreme, but you see my point.

    Sadly, I wish I could agree with you on this last part, but I just can't find it in me. I see this as being a VERY realistic thing.

  230. What happens... by forsaken33 · · Score: 1
    So my question is what happens after a few years? Most sensors of one sort do wear out after a period of time.... So when i start getting pulled over and stuff becuase my sensor doens't work...what defense can i claim? Or will this be like that rent-a-car GPS thing and automatically ticket me? I dont like it.


    Is it just me, or did i notice nothing about identification or security. Guess it sucks to be me once someone figures out how to make it look like im the one thats drunk.



    Although, this does introduce a new market possibly.....brethalizer jammers.

    --
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe =UTF-8&q=. amusing....
  231. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    The arguement i read also seemed to imply that you have a right to travel ON YOUR OWN. For example, if only the government would take you from place to place, then you could lose the right to travel if they decided they didn't want you going anywhere. Kinda like having the freedom of press, but not being allowed to distribute what you publish...

    All in all i haven't decided if i accept the arguement myself, but it did get me thinking, and i just wanted to point out that its out there. At any rate, there are rights that we have that are not spelled out in the Bill of Rights.

  232. Ignition Lock by Untrained+Monkey · · Score: 1

    Maryland currently uses a program along these lines. Repeat offenders or first offenders(if deemed necessary) get an ignition lock installed on their steering column. They must blow into the device every time they try to start the car. If they are intoxicated, the car doesn't start. Their is still the issue of the device failing or tricking the device in order to get the car started. I'm sure a sober friend can activate the starter for you!

  233. Re:So I will drive with my windows open, NEXT by ryanwright · · Score: 1

    I say don't make laws prohibiting it. I guess mandatory was a bad word to use. Better to say: default install, but you can even request a car without one. OK, fine, so make it an optional feature.

    In that case, I'm with you. I don't have a problem with people putting these in their cars by choice. Hell, I was arguing for freedom: If omeone wants one of these things in their car, I'm all for it. Have fun. As long as I don't have to put one in mine, I could care less what everyone else does. :)

    --
    -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig