Your Car Needs A Wallet Too!
M2020 2022 - panel moderation

Your Car Needs A Wallet Too!

A great many consumers are working to reduce the number of services they subscribe to in these difficult times. Yet media and fintechs aside, there is another sector eager to persuade consumers to take out more subscriptions: automobiles. At least five major manufacturers are rolling out subscription models for options on new models.

The manufacturers want customers to pay subscriptions to access features that are already built into the vehicles themselves (such as voice recognition).

Now, people already pay subscriptions for some services, such as satellite radio. I drive a Jaguar, and I pay an annual subscription to keep the navigation system maps updated — via a complicated web/USB system that seems pointless for a vehicle that has its own SIM and data plan, can access my home wifi when parked on the driveway and could download the updates over the air, but I’m not an expert on navigation subsystem design. I’m not sure the subscription is worth it - I generally use Waze via my iPhone when I’m driving - but it doesn’t particularly bother me. But I think I’d be pretty annoyed about paying a subscription to have my heated seats switched on, which is what BMW is doing.

Seriously. BMW is making heated seats and some other features (such as advanced driver assistance, ADAS) available through paid subscriptions in the UK, Germany, New Zealand, South Africa and other countries. Apparently the pricing plans in South Korea are?heated seats for $18 a month to $415 for “unlimited” access and High Beam Assist for $8 a month to $183 for unlimited use.

The idea of having software control over remote vehicles is not in itself bad, but it must be matched with serious security. Frankly, this concerns me, because as a society we don’t seem to have been very successful at making open networks secure and we have been very unsuccessful at making expensive vehicles secure!

(In 2021 keyless car thefts in London reached an all time high. Gangs are apparently able to manipulate the vehicle software so get in and drive off without needing the wireless keyfob.)

Around the world, the vehicle?manufacturers have built up systems to the point where some models already have tens, even hundreds, of?interconnected control units inside them. Securing them may be a greater challenge than securing planes! According to a report from the management consultants McKinsey, typical modern vehicles employ around 150 electronic control units and about 100 million lines of code; by 2030, with the advent of autonomous driving features and vehicle-to-vehicle communication, the number of lines of code may triple.?Compare that with a modern passenger jet with a mere 15 million lines of code (every single one of them rigorously inspected and tested), or a mass-market PC operating system with around 40 million lines of code, and the complexities become clear.

While it is true that there are a whole bunch of companies working to improve vehicle infrastructure, it does seem to me that any system as complex as a modern family car must be vulnerable. Yet the cost of a microchip capable of forming and verifying digital signatures is about 25 cents in volume and the cost of adding them to the engine management system, the entertainment system, the climate control system and so on does not really seem that great to me.

What all of?this means to me, of course, is that the way forward is standards and — you know what I’m going to say here — your car needs a wallet and therefore a digital identity just as much as you do, and that your car subsystems should interoperate on the basis of credentials.?

When it comes those new subscription-based business models, by the way, I rather like the idea of turning subscriptions into digital assets. If I were BMW I’d consider turning those subscription options into NFTs that could be traded across web3 so that we can see what the market thinks that they are worth.

(They would have to make the tokens function properly so that, for example, if I have a BMW heated seats token, then I’d expect it to work in any BMW I get into, whether it’s mine or a rental car or a friend’s car.)

This is a rather attractive model. Since the subscriptions would be standard tokens there would be no need for BMW to waste money on building databases to manage the subscriptions and run the subscription management services. Instead of having to deal with this kind of infrastructure, the manufacturers could just issue the tokens and let the markets work.?

My Jaguar app then might then become a wallet capable of storing the NFTs from any auto maker. When I get into my car and turn on the heated seats, then under the hood (so to speak) the car would ask for a heated seats token and my wallet would present one. All in the background and without me getting involved.

What’s more,?I can imagine a vigorous secondary market developing: if you get fed up with your New York Times subscription, sell it on eBay. If you never use the heated seats, sell them to a mate down the pub.


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Ian Simmonds

My heart beats for payments

1 年

Thanks Dave for sitting in front of an FIS logo ;-)

Khalid El-Awady Matthew Glaser Amanda Hilliard Interesting discussion around vehicle wallets and we're doing with the car

Christian von Hammel-Bonten

Payment and Fintech Consultant | Helping Businesses, Financial Institutions and Fintechs Innovate and Grow | Speaker | Advisor & NED

1 年

This challenge applies to the MetaVerse/Web3 as well. What if I want to take my digital assets from on world to another? Will I get a digital version of my BMW as well when I buy one on the real world and can I take it from one to another world, sell it, upgrade it, order a burger while sitting in my virtual car?

Rick Chandler

Web Pioneer, Technology Mentor, STEM Ambassador Futureist

1 年

Hi Dave. Interesting discussion. Takes me back to 2003 when in a pre-smartphone world a colleague and I went to the design department of a major German car manufacturer to discuss how we could mount a personalised PDA (Ipag at the time) as a docked device in the dashboard of their vehicles. The aim was to "personalise" the vehicle to driver preferences. Turned out even then the car was weighing the driver and checking their eye height and other bodily dimensions by placement of mirrors etc. They could have called it car biometrics I guess. Currently and increasingly many car parts are logged as genuine manufacturers spares through the management system in order to support warranty. With this level of control we are sitting in an environment which is increasingly secured and upon which new propositions are being built. I am working with one such venture at the Plexal Dojo currently. CarStash are building a DLT based Digital twin keyed back to the VIN linked to its VIN and the identified components. It will provide a toolset for owners and of course Government channels to verify the entire history of the vehicle. As DVLA support both vehicle Identity and Driver Identity we are looking at what might be acheived with them.

Jo Spencer

Sezoo Co-Founder | Digital Trust | SSI | Payments | Banking | Consultant | Technical Architect | Musician

1 年

The log book is an obvious (dongle-based) "wallet" requirement, but insurance, performance packages, rego, toll accounts, good driving creds, parking... We will also need to authenticate ourselves to the car to be able to drive (licence, ownership, covered by the insurance)... Surely the Telsa app's got this sorted?

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