Would You Pay To Make Sure People Couldn't Call You While Driving?

from the i-sense-a-problem dept

We’ve seen all sorts of weird or questionable applications, but here’s one that we can’t quite figure out who would buy. It’s an application for your mobile phone that determines if you’re moving, and routes the call directly to voicemail. At the very least, it tells the caller that you’re driving right now and can’t come to the phone, but is that really that important? And how does the app know whether the mobile phone holder is driving… or just a passenger in the car? Or on a bus? And, more importantly, why can’t people just not pick up the phone while they’re driving? Are people really so addicted to picking up their phone when it rings that they would need to pay for an application that stops them from doing so? If there really are such people, we’ve got a better solution: turn off your phone when you drive. It’s cheaper.

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Comments on “Would You Pay To Make Sure People Couldn't Call You While Driving?”

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43 Comments
Hulser says:

Conditioned response

And, more importantly, why can’t people just not pick up the phone while they’re driving? Are people really so addicted to picking up their phone when it rings that they would need to pay for an application that stops them from doing so?

In a word, yes. Maybe “conditioned” would be a better word than “addicted”, but I think that especially for people who grew up before cell phones, a ringing phone is irresistable.

Think of these examples…

You’re at lunch with a couple of friends. One gets a call on his mobile. He answers it and starts talking, leaving you and your other friend to stare at each other until the conversation is over. Phone guy chose to go out to lunch and talk to you, but suddenly he’s talking to someone else.

You’re in line at a store and the cashier answers the phone instead of helping the people in line. There are people who are actually in the store, ready to hand over money, but the cashier it talking to someone who may or may not get to that same point.

In both cases, logic would dicatate that the person not answer the phone. Cell phones have voice mail. Serve customers that are actually ready to give you money first. But people are so conditioned to answer the phone that logic is overridden. I’m sure someone has done a paper on this already, but there’s a disconnect between our conditioning around communication (which was developed before the explosion in communication media) and the number of communication media that the average person has access to today.

Buzz says:

Re: Conditioned response

I was just about to say this exact thing. People are just conditioned to answer the phone regardless of circumstances.

Fortunately, I was raised without that impulse. Growing up, if my family was playing a board game together, my dad would tell everyone to ignore the phone if it rang. Many years later, I married a cellphone generation girl. She was *OFFENDED* to the utmost degree one day when she saw me look at my cellphone (we have no landlines) to see who was calling, silence it, and put it away. I had to explain to her that my life is not controlled by others’ timetables. She isn’t so offended anymore when I do that. 😛

Hulser says:

Re: Re: Conditioned response

She was *OFFENDED* to the utmost degree one day when she saw me look at my cellphone (we have no landlines) to see who was calling, silence it, and put it away.

Ha! Good on you. I think that 20 years ago or more, it made sense that it was considered rude to ignore a phone call. I mean, someone went through the trouble of actually going to where the phone was kept in their house and remembering or looking up your phone number. But now with it being so easy to make a call, this response is outdated. The formula has changed, so now it’s actually more rude to answer the phone in many situations.

Xerloq says:

I disagree with Hulser. It is addiction to be connected. Some people consider it rude to not answer their cell phone, which baffles me.

I’ve told friends and colleagues that I don’t answer my cell if otherwise occupied and they look at me like I’m crazy. “What if it’s really important?” to which I respond “What if I didn’t have a cell/the battery died/I left it at home/etc., how would you reach me?”

I like the idea as a parental control. It beats wrapping my car in a Faraday cage.

Hulser says:

Re: Re:

Well, I can see why people would use the word “addiction” to describe some people’s relationship with their mobile/PDA, my point was that you don’t have to be a Crackberry addict to fall into this conditioned response. If you did a study where you gave people a mobile phone who’d never had one before and put them in a cafeteria with hidden cameras — showing them how to both answer and ignore a call — I bet that almost every one would choose to answer the phone instead of ignoring it. The point it, that even if you factored out the “addicts”, you’d still have the conditioned response.

BTW, people only use the word addiction when they believe an activity is unhealthy. Personally, I don’t think that just because someone spends a lot of time “connected” that it’s an addiction. Yes, anything can be taken to extremes but being connected is not, in and of itself, harmful or unhealthy.

fprintf says:

Parents

Parents buying it for their teenage drivers would be #1 buyer of this in my opinion.

Second buyer would be government/public/business institutions that don’t want their people talking while driving. Sure there are some problems, as you’d identified, but if there could be any reduction in liability for any group that chooses to use these – you can bet someone will jump on it. Insurance companies, for example, would love to create a tier that initially gives better rates to someone with this installed on their mobile phone. (eventually, like everything else, it becomes commonplace and the “discount” eventually goes to zero)

Anonymous Coward says:

I used to work retail in a criminally undermanned store. Usually your manager has standing orders to answer the phone current customers be damned. Usually I was very good about answering the phone and keep the line moving (yay multitasking) but I remember more than a few co workers completely stop and some times chit chat with the person on the line while the line just grew. Sadly if you are already in line to buy something usually the store doesn’t really care anymore, it’s assumed you are buying even if you have to wait a while. (this is only really true with stores that are undermanned)

Overcast says:

It’s funny how many people feel this compelling urge to answer the phone when it rings. Personally, I have no issue ignoring it and calling that person back.

I’d pay nothing for this – I just let it ring and call the person back when I am able to.

But some people might buy it – and to that, I guess for that market, it’s a good product. I can’t really say it’s worthless; since a product’s worth is what the customer is willing to pay for it.

TX CHL Instructor (profile) says:

I have a cellphone...

I have a cellphone for my convenience, not anybody else’s. So, when I’m busy, in a meeting, driving, or engaged in any other activity that is more important that answering the phone, I simply don’t answer the phone. The call goes to voicemail, and I respond when I can.

Just how hard is that, anyway??? You would think everyone is a slave to their electronics.

http://www.chl-tx.com :: Nothing deters violent crime as effectively as the possibility that your intended victim might shoot you. Nothing.

Allan Leinwand (user link) says:

My guess is that the user of this service will not be the one purchasing it – it would be purchased by a parent for insurance reasons or a corporation to help enforce policy. I believe in some areas allowing teens to talk on their cellphones while driving can affect auto insurance rates. For others it may be against corporate policy to drive while on your cellphone (refer to how text messaging and cellphone use may have affected the recent LA train disaster).

Kevin says:

I never understood why people are so conditioned to ALWAYS answer the phone when it rings. I could be sitting on the couch watching TV and I still don’t answer the phone half of the time. On the other hand, my wife even stops mid-sentence in a screaming-at-the-top-of-her-lungs rant at me to answer the phone.

But would I pay to not be interrupted while driving? No. I usually don’t answer the phone. But my car also has bluetooth capability built in, so I see the phone number on my instrument cluster and can hit answer/ignore from a steering wheel button.

EVIL_BASTARD says:

First off let me say, in the interest of full disclosure, that I find the British (BBC link was no surprise) obsession with safety at any cost hilarious and deeply disturbing.

“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.” -roughly attributed to Ben Franbklin

^^ = TRUE. (no one tell Bush and Paulson, they’d have to cancel their current campaign of theft and extortion.

All that said, we should aggressively promote this new service, wait six months, then cancel the licenses and impound the vehicles of those who remain signed up. In conclusion to this long and rambling post, I leave you with this quote:

“Here are your messages: ‘You have thirty minutes to move your car.’ ‘You have ten minutes to move your car.’ ‘Your car has been impounded.’ ‘Your car has been crushed into a cube.’ ‘You have thirty minutes to move your cube.” -Homer S.

diatribe says:

i personally would not, i do not talk on the phone while driving. but, i would pay for others to not be able to talk on the phone while they are driving. lame laws such as that passed in california this past summer indicating that people must use hands-free devices are pointless. it is the act of not focusing on the task at hand – driving – which puts the lives of others sharing the road at risk. not whether the person is yelling at a cheap microphone or holding a cell phone up to their ear.

bad idea says:

teenage feature?

What are people thinking? “I’ll turn off my kids cell phone while he/she drives, that must be safer” well, like one of a cell phones better “features” they are great for emergencies. For instance, A weirdo is following them home from, work and they can’t get them to go away and I can’t call any where (unlikely, but possible),or , a kid has just been kidnapped and the people haven’t figured out they have a cell phone, but because they’re in a car, they can’t call (again unlikely, but possible). There is no good use for this app as Mike said, if you don’t want calls while driving turn it off, or if you don’t want your kids driving and talking, EDUCATE them why they shouldn’t, and if that doesn’t work show them some statics and those gory drivers ed videos/pics. Regardless, I’ll pass on this app.

Alpha Computer (user link) says:

Hands Free Device

I use a hands free device for my cell phone when driving. Around here, it’s the law. But I still do not have to answer the call regardless, if the situation demands it.
Like many, I wonder why I would pay to have my calls rerouted while I am driving? The hands free device cost a few coins and I plan to use it. As a business, people are always looking for money from me. Paying to this rerouting does not make good business cents!

Steve R. (profile) says:

Wrong Question

The REAL focus of this post should questioning why these services are not being provided as part of the product as a free feature. Yes I realize that companies want to make money and that they will attempt to sell you services that are essentially worthless. But there should be limits.

Banks and credit card companies have been sending out solicitations for identity theft protection. Seems to me that preventing fraudulent use of credit cards and checks to a large degree is their responsibility. So why should we pay for a service that is their responsibility? (Yes the customer has an obligation to protect their card or check from fraudulent use too.)

Since companies claim that they selling us products (such as mobile phones) for our benefit; for our benefit they should be providing safety features at no cost to us. After all, our legal system (in part) is based on suing those who sold us unsafe products. Turning the mobile phone off does not make it safe! (humor, for those so challenged.)

Scott says:

Passenger

Not that I would want a feature like this since I **do** make decisions about when to answer or not answer any of my phones; however, could the phone tell the difference when one was driving and when one was a passenger?

Maybe the real solution here is to mandate manual transmissions. You need both hands and both legs to drive in traffic and it is hard to use a cell phone that way. Even harder to text.

l duvall says:

Why pay somone else?

Since when was it so difficult to decide to NOT answer the phone? I have always thought that if someone really wanted to talk to me, they should be willing to call me again, when I DON’T answer the phone while driving, or talking to someone else, or doing anything else that I prefer to do, rather than answer the phone.

Such a service is a great idea, for those too timid to decide to actually not answer the phone on their own.

Anonymous Coward says:

I can think of some pretty obvious reasons:

1) Ringing can be distracting and/or startling, hardly what some more conscientious drivers want.

2) Some callers (bosses, etc.) regard an unanswered phone as a “problem.” Going directly to voicemail “solves” that problem.

The question is, why didn’t you think of these obvious reasons?

Derek Kerton (profile) says:

I Work With The Company That Does This

Mike,

Hmmm. Totally disagree with you on this one, and I like the fact that a lot of the other commenters did too! Of course, I have a financial bias on this since I’m on the Board of Advisers for Aegis Mobility, the Vancouver firm that provides this technology.

The people who guessed that it’s targeted at parents are spot on. But add employers with field forces to that list. These two groups pay the insurance premiums, and the full costs of any “distracted driver” accidents. Insurance firms are very much on board with this service, and are likely to offer discounted premiums to families/companies who can prove they subscribe.

There were many comments about how this would be impractical. Relax, Aegis isn’t dumb! The default is to re-route calls politely with a recorded agent (IVR) when the person is driving. This prevents the distracting ring, interruption, conversation, fumbling for a headset, etc. As people above have indicated, often compulsion drives the ‘ring->answer’ response, not good judgement. Aegis allows the bill payer to supply their judgement to the ‘answer’ decision.

So what if a suspicious car is following you, as was suggested above? Or what if you are actually a passenger as Mike wondered? Well, of course there is an ‘over-ride’ feature that will allow users to place AND receive calls. The catch is that using the over-ride will trigger an SMS or other message to the bill payer. Absolute power to place or take a call always remains with the phone holder, but they are accountable. I think that solves the issues raised above?

Don’t pin this on the British just because it’s a BBC article. The USA is a hot market for Aegis. Also, it is not necessarily offered for a fee. The carrier can determine whether to offer it for free, fee, or bundle. Also, insurance discounts may make it a net gain financially.

I understand Mike’s initial reaction. When I first met the Aegis founders three years ago, I cringed at the idea. I thought “You’re going to go into cellular companies and try to convince them to offer a service that reduces people’s use of cellphones?” But they convinced me of the business model, and they have done yeoman’s work to get endorsements from major insurance brands, the NHTSA, and a multitude of other highway safety advocacy groups. So now carrier’s have a target market: parents and employers, they have a safety-raising product that insurance companies endorse with their wallets, and they have a choice to get ahead of distracted driving, or to do nothing. We’ll see.

To be clear: this isn’t a law, this isn’t ever mandatory, this is the decision of a parent, a guardian, an employer, or whomever owns the payment responsibility for a cellular phone account. Neat idea for the market to decide.

Derek Kerton,
Occasional Techdirt Blogger
Telecom Consultant
http://www.kertongroup.com

Lawrence D'Oliveiro says:

Capitalism In Action

There’s no sustainable business model that you can build on simply telling people not to answer their phones. Whereas, to set up a whole new company, running a custom-built system, and charging fees for it, to answer those calls, store them and pass them on, can indeed be a business model. All because there’s money involved.

David says:

MOBILE phones

Here in the UK, we still do call them “mobiles”. “Cellphone” never caught on and, yes, as I drive for a living and see countless idiots who think they can multi-task by driving and hand-holding a phone at the same time (despite it having been illegal to do so here for some time now), I`m all in favour of some device to stop lunatics like that being able to answer the phone whilst on the move.

Derek Kerton (profile) says:

The Idea Has Lots Of Potential

RE #41, “Good luck with that”

Thanks (even though you are being sarcastic). This is a service that initially sounds bad to anyone. Our initial reaction is negative, because of course we first think of the Aegis service as something that will limit “ME”! But when we think of our teenagers being limited, or commercial drivers – we start to see this may have appeal. Nobody wanted hands free laws for themselves, but over 70% of people wanted them applied to others. Graduated driver’s licenses are another limitation we have no problem supporting, because it was only imposed on teens.

Not every company I work with ends up a winner, for sure. But I’m actually very optimistic here. Not only has Aegis gotten lots of industry support (NHTSA, insurance companies), but if you read comments
2, 4, 6, 10, 18, 20, 25, 30, 33, 35
in this thread, each one of them believes the idea has appeal. That’s a very high number, especially based on a Techdirt post that positioned the idea very negatively.

Derek Kerton (profile) says:

The Idea Has Lots Of Potential

RE #41, “Good luck with that”

Thanks (even though you are being sarcastic). This is a service that initially sounds bad to anyone. Our initial reaction is negative, because of course we first think of the Aegis service as something that will limit “ME”! But when we think of our teenagers being limited, or commercial drivers – we start to see this may have appeal. Nobody wanted hands free laws for themselves, but over 70% of people wanted them applied to others. Graduated driver’s licenses are another limitation we have no problem supporting, because it was only imposed on teens.

Not every company I work with ends up a winner, for sure. But I’m actually very optimistic here. Not only has Aegis gotten lots of industry support (NHTSA, insurance companies), but if you read comments
2, 4, 6, 10, 18, 20, 25, 30, 33, 35
in this thread, each one of them believes the idea has appeal. That’s a very high number, especially based on a Techdirt post that positioned the idea very negatively.

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