Gman
Ram Guru
And for good reason.Why they can’t get the same info from Uconnect is the only question that puzzles me. FCA likely locks dealerships out of global access to that data.
And for good reason.Why they can’t get the same info from Uconnect is the only question that puzzles me. FCA likely locks dealerships out of global access to that data.
Unless your video is different than the one I watched from the link, it does not show that box. It shows what their system does, but doesn't show any hardware. So you are assuming that the box does that, and that the box has no other purpose the vehicle uses it for. Doesn't seem impossible that the same information comes from the uConnect system, or another module somewhere inside the car/truck.No speculation necessary, all you have to do is watch this video all the way through to get it. Many versions of the same thing are out there but the result is the same.
Why they can’t get the same info from Uconnect is the only question that puzzles me. FCA likely locks dealerships out of global access to that data so they had to come up with some other scheme to roll their own.
If you find the ticket under your dash, please consider new Rams for all your friends here!I'll take a look. Hoping to find a missing winning powerball ticket though instead of that
Yeah man I feel you! I’m pissed that I wasn’t told in advance and had to stumble upon it myself. But at the same time glad they went the extra mile to insure recovery of the pick should anything ever happen.I lived in AZ for a bit... cars getting stolen and driven south happened *all the time*.
Still, the dealer should still let people know the thing is installed if it isn't on a sticker or paperwork... install without notification is kinda of a crappy move...
No speculation necessary, all you have to do is watch this video all the way through to get it. Many versions of the same thing are out there but the result is the same.
Why they can’t get the same info from Uconnect is the only question that puzzles me. FCA likely locks dealerships out of global access to that data so they had to come up with some other scheme to roll their own.
..... to insure recovery of the pick should anything ever happen.
Hacking the keyless entry isn't a huge problem and rather inexpensive apparently.
I suppose you could get wound up about being tracked somewhere, but everything these days is tracking you and everyone wants the big data.
I’ve seen videos of people doing funky stuff with devices and stealing cars without the keys or damaging anything!I wonder what the guy talking about the six vehicles stolen from them, at t=4:09 in the video, means by "we had the keyless entry issues". I assume that means some hackers had a bootleg electronic device(s) that can easily unlock & start any vehicle with keyless entry, allowing them to easily swipe six vehicles at one time?
Bro!Recovery for them..... or for you, ...............they never told you that it was there ?![]()
The truck is mine, not the dealer’s or the bank’s and I ripped the dealer for not telling me or giving me access to the data. At the end of the day it’s something that benefits me and as of today I’m the only with access to the data the tracker has through the app.If you spend the time to do a bit of googling and research, you find the 2017+ plethora of OBD-connected passive trackers put on by the dealers is just the another dealer profit center like window tint, VIN etching, paint protection, etc. But a little creepier since there is always a data push going somewhere.
This has nothing to do with the old sub-prime buy-here-pay-here lenders, this is the new factory dealership scheme and the box, in my case, can’t do anything but track itself. Nothing to do with the old lo-jack stuff either. This one's a different, newer scheme.
For those that aren’t aware, for the last 5+ years you have been able to buy your own personal OBD-connected tracker for teen/silver monitoring or whatever you want for a few bucks and a small monthly fee. They’re everywhere from, from Amazon, Target, Best Buy, etc.
https://www.bouncie.com/
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/automa...with-diagnostics-gold/5578713.p?skuId=5578713
https://gotrack.com/
https://vyncs.com/
The list goes on and on. But this tracking relationship is between you and who provides the service. No surprises.
Insurance companies got on board and started branding their OBD trackers too, to provide themselves with your tracking information (i.e. big data) in order to "tailor their rates to your habits".
https://www.progressive.com/auto/discounts/snapshot/
https://www.allstate.com/drive-wise.aspx
This tracking relationship is understood between you and the insurance company. Nobody is completely unaware.
The dealerships have a need to track their cars since they often seem to barely be able to know where anything is at the best of times. In the last year or so they’ve gotten wind of the cheap tracker technology and bury these trackers on every car they have to be able to track them and it costs them nothing. Apex is one that was on my truck (there are many vendors in this market now doing similar) and the entire Apex Protect is owned by a big dealership network, a fact they don’t advertise and try to keep quiet. They track their own cars before the sell them. It costs them nothing because, like window tinting, VIN etching and this “theft protection system”, they peddle the entire cost on to buyers at a many times their actual cost. The dealership that sold me the truck wanted $1400 for essentially a < $100 tracker and gave me 5 years of “free service" (and they get 5 years of data presumably). I paid nothing for it and it was still stuck on my truck and I stuck it on my desk.
I consider the example video posted earlier to be mostly marketing bs (I hope you don't believe that bs either) and like most marketing bs, probably little of it is fact and most made up to sell the message, but the part that is fact is that the chain of dealers doing that is indeed putting it on every new car on the lot, selling the cars on with a tracker of dubious consumer value (given Uconnect’s overlapping features), and making a profit. That’s what they’re about – making a profit using every tool in the tool box. And I would say the average buyer is clueless about all of it – that’s the part that makes it a little creepy.
I suppose you could get wound up about being tracked somewhere, but everything these days is tracking you and everyone wants the big data.
The truck is mine, not the dealer’s or the bank’s and I ripped the dealer for not telling me or giving me access to the data. At the end of the day it’s something that benefits me and as of today I’m the only with access to the data the tracker has through the app.