Feds want ‘driver mode’ for smart phones
Feds want ‘driver mode’ for smart phones
BY MELANIE ZANONA - 11/23/16 11:16 AM EST
A federal safety agency is urging cell phone and
electronic device makers to design products to minimize the potential for
driver distraction.
In new voluntary guidelines released Wednesday, the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) called for the creation
of a “driver mode” for smart phones and other portable devices that are used
while driving.
The goal is to curb road deaths and injuries resulting
from smartphone-based distractions, such as texting, phone calls and social
media.
Regulators point to the historic spike in traffic
fatalities last year, when 35,092 people died on U.S. roads. The NHTSA
estimates that 10 percent of those deadly crashes involved at least one
distracted driver.
"As millions of Americans take to the roads for
Thanksgiving gatherings, far too many are put at risk by drivers who are
distracted by their cell phones," said Transportation Secretary Anthony
Foxx in a statement. "These commonsense guidelines, grounded in the best
research available, will help designers of mobile devices build products that
cut down on distraction on the road."
The NHTSA is proposing a driver mode that would disable
most of a mobile phone’s functions while driving, with the exception of
navigation and music apps.
The guidelines also encourage manufacturers to implement
features such as pairing, where a portable device is linked to a vehicle’s
infotainment system. The NHTSA says the feature helps limit the amount of time
that a driver’s eyes are off the road.
"NHTSA has long encouraged drivers to put down their
phones and other devices, and just drive," said NHTSA Administrator Mark
Rosekind. "With driver distraction one of the factors behind the rise of
traffic fatalities, we are committed to working with the industry to ensure that
mobile devices are designed to keep drivers’ eyes where they belong — on the
road."
But some technology groups ripped the guidelines for
being a regulatory overreach, and pointed out that auto and tech companies have
already created driver-assist technologies and apps that help reduce
distractions.
"NHTSA's approach to distracted driving is
disturbing. Rather than focus on devices which could reduce drunk driving, they
have chosen to exceed their actual authority and regulate almost every portable
device,” said Gary Shapiro, president and chief executive officer of the
Consumer Technology Association. “This regulatory overreach could thwart the
innovative solutions and technologies that help drivers make safer decisions
from ever coming to market.”
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