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Mass. lawmakers want to tweak connected car ?right to repair? law


National Highway Traffic Safety
MY2025
court).H.400
Subaru
the Ars Orbital Transmission
CNMN Collection WIRED Media Group
Condé Nast


Jonathan M. Gitlin
Maura Healy
MY2022
H. 365
Ars

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Massachusetts

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The New York Times
SOURCE: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2022/01/massachusetts-connected-car-right-to-repair-law-still-on-hold/
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Summary

However, Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healy has held off on enforcing the new provisions of the law due to an ongoing federal lawsuit brought by a coalition of automakers who claim that the current law is incompatible with widely accepted cybersecurity practices (a view shared by a horrified-sounding National Highway Traffic Safety Administration).The OEMs argue that MY2022 was too short a deadline, and these two new bills aim to remedy the issue.H. 365 would change the law such that the connected car provisions only come into effect for MY2025, which would give automakers another two years to roll out a security-compliant open platform for all their connected cars (or another two years to fight the law in court).H.400 also swaps MY2022 for MY2025 and requires OEMs to put a notice in owners manuals that explain what the connected or telematics platform is and what data gets collected, stored, or transmitted. OEMs must also give owners the ability to access that data and approve third-party repairs.Should the law be upheld as-is in the federal case and not amended by either of these bills, the result could be OEMs disabling connected car services for vehicles in Massachusetts.

As said here by Jonathan M. Gitlin