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10 Ways Your Next Car Could Control More Than Just The Road

News Image By PNW Staff July 15, 2026
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For more than a century, the automobile has represented something far greater than transportation.

It represented freedom.

The freedom to leave whenever you wanted. To take the scenic route without asking permission. To pile the family into the car for a cross-country vacation. To disappear down an empty highway with nothing but a full tank of gas and endless possibilities ahead.

The automobile became woven into the American identity because it symbolized independence itself.

But quietly--almost without anyone noticing--that relationship is changing.

Today's vehicles are no longer simply machines powered by gasoline and steel. They are rolling computers equipped with artificial intelligence, GPS tracking, cloud connectivity, cameras, microphones, biometric sensors, wireless software updates, and the ability to communicate with dozens of systems outside the vehicle.

Increasingly, they don't just respond to your commands--they observe them, analyze them, record them, and sometimes even override them.

The latest debate surrounding Subaru's expanded EyeSight driver-monitoring system is only the newest example. Using cameras that monitor driver attention, the system can issue escalating warnings and, under certain conditions, bring the vehicle to a controlled stop if it determines the driver has become unresponsive. Similar driver-monitoring technology is already appearing in vehicles from Cadillac, Ford, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Volvo and other manufacturers.

Viewed individually, most of these innovations appear sensible. Many genuinely improve safety and save lives.

Viewed together, however, they reveal something much bigger.

The automobile is quietly evolving from a machine we control into a connected platform that increasingly influences--and documents--how we travel.

If these trends continue, here are ten changes every driver should be thinking about.


1. The Car Is Watching

For most of automotive history, the only person watching your driving was the passenger sitting beside you.

Today, cameras inside many newer vehicles monitor eye movement, blinking, head position, and signs of distraction or fatigue. Manufacturers argue these systems reduce accidents by detecting when drivers become drowsy or inattentive, and there is good reason to believe many of these technologies can improve road safety.

But every camera also creates another stream of highly personal information.

If these trends continue, one could imagine future systems becoming increasingly sophisticated--distinguishing stress, distraction, illness, or even recognizing exactly who is behind the wheel. Whether those capabilities are ever used beyond safety purposes will depend on future policies, consumer expectations, and legal safeguards.

The question is no longer simply whether your vehicle can watch you.

The more important question is: who owns what it sees?

2. The Car Never Forgets

Modern vehicles know far more about us than most drivers realize.

Navigation systems remember destinations. Connected apps store favorite locations. GPS records travel patterns. Bluetooth connections identify phones that regularly ride in the vehicle.

Over time, your car can build an astonishingly detailed picture of your life.

It knows where you work.

Where you worship.

Where your children go to school.

Where you receive medical care.

General Motors faced significant criticism after reports that driving data collected through its OnStar Smart Driver program had been shared with data brokers that supplied information used by insurance companies. Following the controversy, GM announced changes to the program.

That episode served as a reminder that driving data has real value.

Travel history may become one of the most valuable forms of personal information ever collected--not because anyone necessarily intends to misuse it today, but because it reveals so much about who we are.

3. The Car Is Judging

Insurance companies have already begun scoring how we drive.

Programs such as Progressive Snapshot, State Farm Drive Safe & Save, and Allstate Drivewise monitor acceleration, braking, speed, mileage, and driving habits in exchange for potential premium discounts.

For many drivers, participation is voluntary.

For safe drivers, it can even save money.

But it also demonstrates something much larger.

Driving behavior is becoming measurable.

Searchable.

And valuable.

Will driving history becoming another digital profile alongside credit reports and consumer data? Employers with company fleets, rental agencies, or future transportation services may all place different values on that information.

The technology itself is neither good nor bad.

The important question is how broadly society eventually chooses to use it.


4. You May Own The Car--But Someone Else Controls The Software

Buying a car used to mean owning everything it contained.

Increasingly, software has changed that equation.

BMW introduced subscription services for features such as heated seats in some markets. Mercedes-Benz has offered software subscriptions that unlock additional performance. Tesla regularly adds or modifies features through over-the-air software updates.

Imagine explaining to your grandfather that after purchasing a $70,000 automobile, you might still pay monthly to activate equipment already installed inside it.

Software--not mechanical parts--may increasingly determine what your vehicle can and cannot do.

Ownership itself is slowly being redefined.

5. The Car Can Override You

Automatic emergency braking.

Lane-keeping assistance.

Emergency steering.

Adaptive cruise control.

These innovations have undoubtedly prevented accidents and saved lives.

Yet they also represent a historic shift.

For the first time, automobiles are beginning to make decisions that once belonged exclusively to drivers.

Today's systems intervene primarily during emergencies.

Future debates over where assistance ends and authority begins. Should software only prevent collisions? Should it intervene if it believes a driver is dangerously fatigued? What standards should govern those decisions?

Technology is steadily expanding what vehicles are capable of deciding.

Society must decide where those boundaries belong.

6. Safety Is Becoming The Gateway

History teaches an interesting lesson.

Many surveillance technologies begin with good intentions.

Airport screening expanded after terrorist attacks.

Traffic cameras promised safer intersections.

License plate readers helped recover stolen vehicles.

Driver-monitoring systems seek to reduce distracted and impaired driving.

Few people object to those goals.

The challenge comes years later, when technologies originally introduced for one purpose gradually find additional uses.

Citizens and lawmakers alike will face increasingly important questions about privacy, oversight, and accountability. The debate isn't whether safety matters--it clearly does. The debate is how to preserve liberty while pursuing it.

7. The Car Could Become A Climate Tool

Transportation policy is evolving rapidly.

London has congestion pricing.

New York recently implemented congestion pricing in parts of Manhattan.

Oregon has experimented with its voluntary OReGO road-usage program as an alternative way to fund transportation.

Various governments have explored mileage-based taxes, low-emission zones, or other approaches intended to reduce congestion or emissions.

Supporters see these policies as practical solutions.

Critics worry they could gradually increase oversight of everyday travel.

Imagine transportation becoming increasingly personalized because technology now makes it possible to measure where, when, and how vehicles are used with remarkable precision.

The technology exists.

The public conversation about how it should be used is only beginning.

8. The Car Could Become A Gatekeeper

Imagine starting your car one morning only to have it determine you're too tired to drive.

Or detecting signs of a medical emergency.

Or concluding you're impaired.

Some of these capabilities could genuinely save lives.

Alcohol interlock devices already prevent certain convicted DUI offenders from starting their vehicles. Emergency Stop Assist systems can safely slow vehicles if drivers become incapacitated.

The building blocks already exist.

One could imagine vehicles taking on even greater responsibility for determining when intervention is appropriate. That possibility raises an important philosophical question: how much authority should software ever exercise over its owner?

That conversation deserves to happen before technology answers it by default.


9. The Car Is Becoming Part Of A Much Bigger Network

Your vehicle no longer operates alone.

It increasingly communicates with your smartphone.

Navigation providers.

Cloud services.

Emergency responders.

Insurance companies.

Charging networks.

Traffic management systems.

Each connection seems harmless by itself.

Collectively, however, they form one of the largest digital ecosystems ever built around everyday transportation.

Automobiles could become just one component within a much broader network where information flows continuously between vehicles, businesses, and public infrastructure.

Convenience and connectivity will undoubtedly increase.

So will the importance of protecting privacy and maintaining public trust.

10. The Car Is Redefining Freedom

In 1975, a car was primarily steel, rubber, gasoline, and mechanical parts.

In 2027, a new vehicle may contain more software code than many advanced military aircraft, remain connected to cloud services, receive remote updates, communicate with numerous external systems, and generate continuous streams of operational data.

That is an extraordinary transformation.

Technology has delivered remarkable advances in automotive safety, reliability, and convenience. Few people would willingly give up airbags, anti-lock brakes, or collision warning systems.

But every technological leap also changes the relationship between people and the machines they depend upon.

Students of Bible prophecy have long recognized that Scripture describes a future in which unprecedented levels of economic and societal coordination become possible. The Bible does not identify the specific technologies that may exist in that future. Yet each year, innovations once confined to science fiction become ordinary features of daily life.

Connected vehicles illustrate how rapidly technologies capable of widespread monitoring, data collection, digital verification, and centralized coordination are developing.

Wise Christians need not fear technology, nor should they reject every innovation simply because it is new.

But neither should we be naïve.

The automobile once symbolized freedom because it expanded where people could go.

If current trends continue, the next generation of vehicles may also be remembered for expanding what others know about where we go--and perhaps, one day, how much influence they may have over that journey.

That possibility alone makes this a conversation worth having before the road ahead is chosen for us.



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