Ford Submits Patent For Car That Repossesses Itself Or Locks Drivers Out Of Features If Payments Missed | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the The Daily Wire. The author of this post is Ben Zeisloft.

    Ford submitted a patent application for a self-driving vehicle that would repossess itself if the owner misses car payments.

    The application, initially filed two years ago but published last week by the United States Patent and Trademark Office, involves a series of computer interactions that would initiate a "multi-step repossession procedure" in the case of delinquency. Banks could send drivers or leaseholders multiple warnings about missed payments before the vehicle is eventually locked or made to cooperate with repossession processes initiated by the financial institutions.

    "When an acknowledgment is not received within a reasonable period of time, the first computer may disable a functionality of a component of the vehicle or may place the vehicle in a lockout condition," the patent application said, referencing the computer controlled by the lending agency. "The lockout condition may be lifted momentarily in case of an emergency to allow the vehicle to travel to a medical facility."

    The technology could theoretically be implemented in several vehicle classes, including both electric and internal combustion vehicles. In the event of missed payments, the technology could also begin to deactivate vehicle features such as the air conditioning system, remote key fobs, and automated locks to "cause an additional level of discomfort to a driver and occupants of the vehicle" and encourage payment submissions. The technology could alternatively activate chimes, beepers, or radios to "emit an incessant and unpleasant sound every time the owner is present in the vehicle."

    With more unheeded car payment warnings, the driver could also be subjected to a "geofence" outside of which systems needed to drive the car would be deactivated. The system could also lock the vehicle outside of work hours to avoid "adversely affecting a livelihood of the owner of the vehicle," thereby "hampering the owner's ability to make payments."

    Lack of action from the driver could result in the vehicle calling for a tow truck company; semi-autonomous vehicles could move themselves to a location "more convenient" for the tow truck operators, while fully autonomous vehicles could be moved "from the premises of the owner" to the premises of a repossession agency or lending institution without a tow truck.

    Vehicles with high mileage could be directed to automatically drive themselves to a junkyard if repossession costs are substantially high. In another situation, a vehicle could call the police if the driver attempts to "foil a repossession procedure" and block the vehicle's path.

    The patent application comes as more consumers default on their automotive loans due to economic turmoil and inflationary pressures. The number of debtors delinquent by more than 60 days increased 26.7% year-over-year as of December 2022, according to a report from Cox Automotive. Some 1.84% of loans were severely delinquent, marking the highest rate since the aftermath of the financial crisis.

    Over the past two years, inflation has prompted consumers to use more debt while financing their transactions. Higher economy-wide interest rates induced by the Federal Reserve are meanwhile translating to record car payments: average annual percentage rates on new financed vehicles increased from 5.7% in the third quarter of 2022 to 6.5% in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to data from the car review website Edmunds, while the rate for used financed vehicles increased from 9% to 10%.

    Despite the higher amounts of indebtedness and resultant delinquency levels, financial institutions have previously carried out abuses by repossessing vehicles. Wells Fargo agreed to a $3.7 billion settlement with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau last year after the bank illegally assessed fees on various loans and wrongly repossessed cars.
Go Back

HbAD0

Latest Regional Business

WASHINGTON, NC— The Beaufort County Community College Foundation received a $40,000 donation from the First Annual Belhaven Trout Tournament and Festival.
Coming on the heels of a second-quarter report that saw losses of $526.7 million, VinFast reported Thursday that it lost an additional $623 million for the third quarter of 2023.
Charlotte has joined a list of major US cities who recently placed a formal bid to designate the Queen City as a nationally recognized regional tech hub.
As North Carolina is America’s ninth most populous state, film and television producers are working with the Tarheel State in mind.
Beaufort County officials on Thursday helped the Beaufort County Committee of 100 welcome renowned e-commerce, digital marketing, and consulting firm BTW Global, LLC to its new headquarters in Washington.
Disney plans to eliminate thousands of jobs next week, dismissing as many as 15% of entertainment staffers, according to a recent report from Bloomberg.
Neuralink founder Elon Musk said he hopes implanting wireless brain-computer chips in humans will play a role in the existential risk of population reduction posed by artificial intelligence.
Ford announced on Monday that it is pausing construction on a multi-billion dollar battery plant in Marshall, Michigan that had drawn scrutiny from U.S. lawmakers over the company’s partnership with Chinese battery-maker Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., or CATL.
On Tuesday, for the second year in a row, North Carolina earned the top spot in CNBC’s annual “America’s Top States for Business” rankings out of all 50 states.

HbAD1

North Carolina is one of six southern states that, together, have become an economic powerhouse, overtaking the once dominant Northeast region of the United States. That’s according to a new analysis from Bloomberg.
North Carolina is set to receive over $1.53 billion in federal funding to help with expanding high-speed internet across the state. The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) made the announcement Monday.
It’s not just young people who are getting screwed by the current economy.
The Federal Reserve hiked interest rates to the highest level in 22 years on Wednesday, despite easing inflationary pressures.
David Stevens, a senior housing official under former President Barack Obama, condemned a proposal from President Joe Biden that will effectively penalize financially stable homebuyers to subsidize those with higher risk.
North Carolina benefitted from the COVID-19 pandemic in terms of small business migration. That’s according to a new Bureau of Labor Statistics report.
Last week, Beer Serves America reported that the beer industry contributes 75,082 jobs and brings in about $1.8 billion in taxes to the state of North Carolina.

HbAD2

 
Back to Top