Monday, 29 April 2019

SWI swissinfo.ch: Controversial Tesla police car fleet ready for patrol duty



Main Features
Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch
Search on swissinfo

Data protection
Controversial Tesla police car fleet ready for patrol duty
This content was published on April 26, 2019 2:45 PM Apr 26, 2019 - 14:45
Tesla X 100D, part of the fleet

A Tesla X 100D, part of the new fleet, as seen in December 2018
(© Keystone / Georgios Kefalas)

The police force of the Swiss canton of Basel City will be putting two of its new Tesla electric cars on patrol from this weekend, following a row over the vehicles’ purchase and data protection issues.

The canton’s justice and police department said on Fridayexternal link that two of the seven cars ordered were ready for use and that police officers had completed their training.

In addition, the canton’s data protection officer Beat Rudin had completed his final reportexternal link on the high-tech, specially-adapted vehicles, with the force taking on board all eight of Rudin’s recommendations. This included replacing the Tesla SIM card with a Swiss-made one.

Rudin had originally said that the vehicles should not be used until data protection issues had been addressed. In a statement on Friday, he clarified that he had no further objection to the vehicles being used, should the eight  recommendations be adopted.
Controversy

In March 2018, the force announced that it was ordering seven Tesla cars as emergency response vehicles. At CHF140,000 ($137,000) each, the Teslas cost considerably more than existing police vehicles, and some local parliamentarians condemned the move as too expensive.

But the force countered there would be lower fuel and maintenance costs, and that the environmental impact would be lower.

A row then erupted in December, shortly after some of the cars arrived, over data protection. The Tesla artificial intelligence system sends out data, such as the position of vehicles. The police force was sharply criticised for not conducting an adequate assessment of data protection risks.

Misgivings again surfaced in February this year after a parliamentary commission in the northern canton ruled that the cars were bought “unlawfully” because public tender rules were not observed.

In total, three of the seven cars have now arrived in Basel. One will be kept in reserve. The other four are due to arrive by the end of the year, the justice and police department said.
Chinese boy in a blue car
Swiss strategy
What does the future hold for electric vehicles?

Keystone-SDA/swissinfo.ch/ilj
Tags

    Politics
    Sci & Tech
    Business
    Law and order
    Environment

Neuer Inhalt

Horizontal Line
SWI swissinfo.ch on Instagram

SWI swissinfo.ch on Instagram
SWI swissinfo.ch on Instagram
subscription form

Form for signing up for free newsletter.

Sign up for our free newsletters and get the top stories delivered to your inbox.
Email address
Top stories (weekly)
Latest news (daily)
Business (weekly)
Politics (weekly)
Society (weekly)
Fintech (biweekly)
Multinationals (biweekly)

Click here to see more newsletters

No comments: