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kramdra
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PostPosted: 12:05 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

Thought this is worthy of a thread. I have heard about this idea before but did not realise it had been implemented Shocked


Im not 100% opposed to the idea, however I feel it should not have any communication ability. It should be a recorder that police can access after a bad crash rather than a spy device monitored round the clock by insurers to put your premium up. It should be optional, I would not want one myself Laughing and if it were forced on me I'd like to see it hacked, sending them pictures of kittens to lower my premium


Some links to read up on
https://blackboxinsurancereviews.com/reviews/black-box-insurance-the-truth/

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?f=10&t=1208259
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arry
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PostPosted: 13:11 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

kramdra wrote:
It should be a recorder that police can access after a bad crash rather than a spy device monitored round the clock by insurers to put your premium up. It should be optional, I would not want one myself Laughing and if it were forced on me I'd like to see it hacked, sending them pictures of kittens to lower my premium


Telematics are already in the UK market. Direct Line have been running a pilot for a while now based on a iPhone app which sends data back to the centre and allows the insurer to work out an 'average driving style'. That is to say it's likely how fast you accelerate, how hard you brake, what your cornering G is, and how much you exceed the speed limit. With all of that data, you can work out based on the parameters you assess who the 'good and bad drivers' are - I'm using inverted commas as I'm 10x the driver my wife is but I accelerate, brake and corner harder than she does, but that's not what most people including safety campaigners, driving instructors et al would look for in a driver. Hey ho.

I love the 'put your premium up' bit though; the whole point of moving to telematics is to try to get reasonable insurance costs to those that drive safely, not to put the price up on drivers that don't - the drivers that don't drive safely aren't the type of drivers you want to insure (you never take enough in premium to cover their recklessness)
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Ingah
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PostPosted: 13:24 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm against these for similar reasons to arry.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 13:31 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

I'm fine with spyboxes, as long as it doesn't impinge on the storage space for my pipe and slippers. What I don't follow is how exactly that information is going to be used.

I mean, what happens at the end of the policy or whenever an assessment point is reached, and Computer Says No? In my case, it might very well be because the box reports that I've done far fewer miles than I estimated that I would (in my car).

Extra charge? Refund? How much? On what criteria? I've read a few headlines, but I'm vague on the specifics.
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arry
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PostPosted: 13:36 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

Rogerborg wrote:
I'm fine with spyboxes, as long as it doesn't impinge on the storage space for my pipe and slippers. What I don't follow is how exactly that information is going to be used.

I mean, what happens at the end of the policy or whenever an assessment point is reached, and Computer Says No? In my case, it might very well be because the box reports that I've done far fewer miles than I estimated that I would (in my car).

Extra charge? Refund? How much? On what criteria? I've read a few headlines, but I'm vague on the specifics.


The long term aim is to feed information back to the user, so you can see how you compare to others. That way you can adjust your driving to suit. The specifics of how additional or return premiums are worked out I've not looked into plans for as yet. I've no reason to; I don't want one. I'd rather pay more.
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 13:47 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

If you compare the type of drivers and the type of accidents Im sure the "safer" drivers actually cause a lot more.

If one of these boxes was on a car and it SMIDSY's a motorbike, is that going to affect the claim? will data be provided to the 3rd party? will the fact one has a box make the bike seem at fault Shocked


How far will they go with this? they could make cars share data with others nearby and plod, camera to record others. Overtake somone at 72mph, instant fine Shocked

I dont see it as a reduction in premiums. It gives them a lot more data for which they can claim you are a higher risk, and then a huge oppertunity to fine you if they dont like it.
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Berk
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PostPosted: 13:53 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

While I was doing my driving lessons my instructor told me about another student of his that had a black box from her insurers. We'd just come out of a lane onto a fairly fast road that curved away, he pointed out that someone coming along the road might not see you emerge until they were fairly close, so advised that I basically put my foot down and get up to speed a bit faster than normal.
He'd given the same advice to this other student, especially as it was a junction she would use quite often. All went well, but when he spoke to her next week she said that she'd followed his advice while practising in her own car, uploaded the data from the black box a few days later and got flagged up for "excessive acceleration" and warned by the software that repeated flags like that might affect her insurance premiums.

Sounds like crap to me, I wouldn't want to be crawling out of that side road.
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arry
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PostPosted: 13:57 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

kramdra wrote:
If you compare the type of drivers and the type of accidents Im sure the "safer" drivers actually cause a lot more.

If one of these boxes was on a car and it SMIDSY's a motorbike, is that going to affect the claim? will data be provided to the 3rd party? will the fact one has a box make the bike seem at fault Shocked


How far will they go with this? they could make cars share data with others nearby and plod, camera to record others. Overtake somone at 72mph, instant fine Shocked

I dont see it as a reduction in premiums. It gives them a lot more data for which they can claim you are a higher risk, and then a huge oppertunity to fine you if they dont like it.


1) there's a big difference between accident frequency and severity. The severity index goes up through the roof on high risk drivers such as under 21's; so within this bracket, trying to insure only sensible 18-19 year olds is quite tricky and can be very, very costly if you get it wrong. Telematics offers them a solution of getting on the road at an affordable price. For this, it's good.
2) It wouldn't affect the claim at all by current methods - and there's no duty of disclosure of the telematics information to the third party at any point - it remains the company's information to do with as they see fit.
3) How far they go with it depends on how many people vote with their feet; turn away from it and spurn the idea it'll go away - embrace it and the idea will develop. I'm not going to embrace it - I don't need to save money on my car insurance and I want to drive as I like, when I like, without scrutiny.
4) You may not see it as a reduction in premium but that's exactly what it does - drive to their rules and you get a cheaper deal. Your attitude to this is a fairly typical anti-insurance style rant which comes about when new innovations brought in, specifically to satisfy customer demand and feedback, which are seen cynically by the general public. I just get used to it, tbh.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 16:18 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sorry, I'm still not getting it.

1. Install spybox.
2. ...
3. Profit

It rather sounds like step 2 is "people will drive more timidly because they know they're being monitored, even though there's no direct effect on their premium at all."

A bit like those cardboard cut out coppers they use in Poundland (and I don't mean PCSOs).
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arry
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PostPosted: 16:30 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Typed a big reply and fricking lost it Sad

Oh well. Anyway, it's about more accurately pricing drivers based on their driving and how it compares to the average, rather than assuming they're an average driver based on a subset of data collated from their peers. It gives people that are good drivers the chance to lower their premiums by proving that they're good drivers, and if they turn out not to be good drivers - gives them the chance to alter their driving to be a better driver, leading (hopefully, of course) to a reduction in accident frequency and severity, and with that lower claims costs, which means more sustainable insurance solutions for all.
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kramdra
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PostPosted: 17:23 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

You seem unaware there are plans for this to become compulsory and is already in law in the US (Section 31406 of Senate Bill 1813 - MAP-21), although it states "data event recorder" rather than telematrics. That implies to me that physical access is required to get data and that insurers do not have access, but may be wrong.


arry wrote:
It gives people that are good drivers the chance to lower their premiums by proving that they're good drivers


Defining "good" as the ability to follow a few stupid rules that have no actual evidence of improving safety or reducing severity and could for many people have the opposite effect - like driving past a speed camera always watching clocks.


Quote:
and if they turn out not to be good drivers - gives them the chance to alter their driving to be a better driver, leading (hopefully, of course) to a reduction in accident frequency and severity, and with that lower claims costs, which means more sustainable insurance solutions for all.



tell me how this will detect people having a lack of attention, using devices/phones/texting or sheer imcompetence? these are the biggest and growing problems on the road, rather than boy racers going sideways down country lanes. How will this deal with taxi drivers that make suddern U turns without checking mirrors first?

I am/was a professional driver, I have a clean licence with no claims in the last 5 years. I take pride in my ability to spot and avoid speed cameras while following the rules of the road. I think this says a hell of a lot more about awareness than somone that has never sped in their life out of fear that they might be caught. Insurers seem to belive that everyone that speeds does get caught and so they must be evil high risk drivers.

My mother is not a competent driver (distracted easily, poor sight, little understanding of how to control a car), yet she would love one of these boxes. I will suggest it to her! although she has never had a fault accident I would say thats a combination of low milage and luck. Has had many "incidents" with the garage wall Laughing


Are you also aware of Brighton city council's idea of making the whole area 20mph? it is a joke, but I am interested to see if that will alter the precieved risk to my insurers when I mention it to them.


Quote:
Your attitude to this is a fairly typical anti-insurance style rant


Perhaps becuase insurers have fucked me in the past. My current policy tripled last year for no reason at all and I have a firm belief that this is becuase they can, not becuase I am higher risk. When I compared my policy I find that I am paying the same amount - £200, to the insurer, but a hell of a lot more to the broker, yet I was unable to get lower quotes elsewhere. = price fixing, so why should I play by the rules?
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 18:51 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Very valid points about this not recording actual bad driving. You missed tailgating. Wink

However, I'm still not seeing the mechanism that will alter prices based on driving. Any discount that an insurer might give you for pipe-and-slippers bimbling around would presumably be swallowed up in the 2nd year 'loyalty penalty' (pronounced 'introductory bonus from everyone else'). The thought of renewing with the same insurer just seems bizarre now.

And given that insurers apparently still don't even have a common NCD system (what with all the posting of bits of paper around), I can't see them sharing driving style stats between each other.

kramdra wrote:
You seem unaware there are plans for this to become compulsory and is already in law in the US

We don't live in the USA. If you want to rouse a UK rabble over this, I think you'll need to come up with more than that. Even though I'm minded to agree with you.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 19:00 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

Thought Norwich Union (as was) had tried black box type things about a decade or so ago but given it up as a bad idea with little demand.

What would be interesting is the raw stats to figure out the actual relationship between driving style and risk. Suspect it might not be anything like as clear cut as the assumptions made when setting up these schemes.

As an aside, seems likely that having one of these as a condition of the policy would be dubious once the certificate has been delivered. Think it would come under 'the carrying on the vehicle of any particular apparatus' as a clause that would have no effect.

All the best

Keith
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arry
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PostPosted: 19:48 - 25 Feb 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

kramdra wrote:
You seem unaware there are plans for this to become compulsory and is already in law in the US (Section 31406 of Senate Bill 1813 - MAP-21), although it states "data event recorder" rather than telematrics. That implies to me that physical access is required to get data and that insurers do not have access, but may be wrong.


No, quite aware - but we're not in the US and there's not even discussion of compulsory uptake in this country as yet. If there is talk of it, then I'd oppose it, as I've already made clear.


Quote:

Defining "good" as the ability to follow a few stupid rules that have no actual evidence of improving safety or reducing severity and could for many people have the opposite effect - like driving past a speed camera always watching clocks.


Indeed it could - or it might not. There's no evidence to either side at the moment, so it's impossible to draw any conclusion without conjecture, which is of course totally pointless at this stage. Again, I've already stated my view in that what road safety campaigners might like to see as indicative of poor driving standards, wouldn't personally cross my radar. There's a touch of 'dumbing down for the masses' about it all and I don't like that in the slightest.

Quote:
tell me how this will detect people having a lack of attention, using devices/phones/texting or sheer imcompetence? these are the biggest and growing problems on the road, rather than boy racers going sideways down country lanes. How will this deal with taxi drivers that make suddern U turns without checking mirrors first?


As already said, there's no evidence to the positive or negative. You're assuming that people that text or pull u turns without looking would sign up to the scheme - maybe they wouldn't and if it did become compulsory, maybe they'd never pull any G on braking, cornering or acceleration, and never have an accident, and get the cheapest of premiums - but how's that any different from now, for example? Insurance pricing doesn't govern good / bad driving - the law does. You want more law enforcement for bad driving standards then don't look to the insurance companies for it - look to Government to introduce sterner testing, better after test training and more drivers education in schools at an early age, for example.

Quote:
I am/was a professional driver, I have a clean licence with no claims in the last 5 years. I take pride in my ability to spot and avoid speed cameras while following the rules of the road. I think this says a hell of a lot more about awareness than somone that has never sped in their life out of fear that they might be caught. Insurers seem to belive that everyone that speeds does get caught and so they must be evil high risk drivers.

My mother is not a competent driver (distracted easily, poor sight, little understanding of how to control a car), yet she would love one of these boxes. I will suggest it to her! although she has never had a fault accident I would say thats a combination of low milage and luck. Has had many "incidents" with the garage wall Laughing


Quite. Totally agree with you - but again what's different to now? Very rarely see a copper out on road nowadays, rely on the cameras which are black/white in terms of offence/non offence and don't capture people on their phones, doing U turns etc. Dramatising it because insurers are looking to form a matrix of what makes a good / bad driver out of the information they can gather doesn't change a thing.

Quote:
Are you also aware of Brighton city council's idea of making the whole area 20mph? it is a joke, but I am interested to see if that will alter the precieved risk to my insurers when I mention it to them.


Where's Brighton?! Laughing Most councils are anti car in some way - road safety shmafetey bullcrap. All the roads around my office are 20mph now just in case someone gets deaded - it's the way of the world we live in. It may well alter the risk to insurers over the longer term if it's enforced, bedded in and reduces casualty numbers. The irony of this is - and I kid you not - Insurers would be better off if you smack a child over at 50mph in a 30 than 20mph in a 20. 20mph is plenty fast enough to do damage enough to be paying a shed load of compensation, whereas 50 just means they're dead. Dead children are cheaper than alive ones with life-long dependency issues.

Quote:

Perhaps becuase insurers have fucked me in the past. My current policy tripled last year for no reason at all and I have a firm belief that this is becuase they can, not becuase I am higher risk. When I compared my policy I find that I am paying the same amount - £200, to the insurer, but a hell of a lot more to the broker, yet I was unable to get lower quotes elsewhere. = price fixing, so why should I play by the rules?


Hate to break it to you, but that's not price fixing.
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BTTD
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PostPosted: 13:50 - 05 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

The point of making a city 20mph throughout is to make it more attractive to pedestrians and cyclists - thereby reducing the overall amount of vehicular traffic and reducing congestion.
In a dense city environment, 30mph v 20mph doesn't make all that much difference. You'll still get stuck at the lights / queue at the next junction which is what really impacts journey time.
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Joncrete Cungle
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PostPosted: 15:56 - 05 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I can forsee anyone daft enough to volunteer to install one in their vehicle being ripe for a speculative state fishing trip. Doris McCurtaintwitcher vaguely reports a small black car suspected of endangering kittens on Blossom Avenue outside number 117.

PCSO Cross searches for cars that have been driven down Blossom Avenue on the day in question, finds that divvy Dave drove his black Corsa at 21mph in a 20 zone. Divvy Dave gets a S59.

Not to mention all the data the rozzers can and will eventually get if you are suspected of speeding, dangerous driving, driving without due care and attention or pulling wheelies etc.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 16:40 - 05 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

It is a concern.

However, unless the systems have Home Office and VOSA certification out the wazoo, PCSO Cross (who has no business acting like a warranted constable anyway) has no chance of getting a conviction. I've confirmed that (most) traffic offences aren't counted as sanctioned detections anyway, so it won't be on his targets performance metrics.

Bear in mind that the vasty network of ANPR cameras could (with a little re-porpoising) be used to hand out speeding tax left, right and centre, if revenue or targets start dropping off.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 19:05 - 05 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rogerborg wrote:

However, unless the systems have Home Office and VOSA certification out the wazoo, PCSO Cross (who has no business acting like a warranted constable anyway) has no chance of getting a conviction.


No conviction needed for a S59.

All the best

Keith
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Minty
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PostPosted: 10:37 - 06 Mar 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

arry wrote:
Telematics are already in the UK market. Direct Line have been running a pilot for a while now based on a iPhone app which sends data back to the centre and allows the insurer to work out an 'average driving style'. That is to say it's likely how fast you accelerate, how hard you brake, what your cornering G is, and how much you exceed the speed limit.


I have tried this app on my bike. Got a score of 50 with no breakdown on what that actually meant. Uninstalled.
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arry
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PostPosted: 12:10 - 06 Mar 2013    Post subject: Re: Bell insurance black boxes Reply with quote

Minty wrote:
I have tried this app on my bike. Got a score of 50 with no breakdown on what that actually meant. Uninstalled.


LOL!

I've just been looking at the intranet today and the top results (good score) is 76, ranging down to 52, so you're worse than the worst Laughing

I've no idea what any of it means either. I think after the pilot they were going to go a little further with it and provide a breakdown but since I wasn't going to install it, I didn't really read up.
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Minty
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PostPosted: 20:37 - 06 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I used it knowing my mobike would not be its friend. Croydon would have come higher than 3rd were it not for me!
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Rogue_Shadow
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PostPosted: 23:23 - 06 Mar 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

As long as the existing "pay money, get insured" system still exists.
The insurance company's can stick their every judging magic box up their ... Rolling Eyes

I drive
I ride (debatable)

I don't want to be constantly monitored come under scrutiny, just because I fancy using the engines potential every now and again.

On the flipside, if they introduce them including features such as "tracker". Letting the rider view his route, locate this motorcycle when stolen and identify when a possible crash has occurred and contact assistance.
ONLY then would I contemplate one, providing how dependent the policy price was on riders riding style. Laughing
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daemonoid
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PostPosted: 19:41 - 10 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm still a bit language challenged over here*, but I have insurance and having had a discussion with the broker it works like this...

Your vehicle has a value and a power rating (PS). Your insurance is then calculated based on that.

No alterations for age, no alterations for driving style, no alterations for mileage.

Prices for many things over here are higher than the UK, but insurance is still reasonable. I paid ~£300 for my BMW330d, the prices are reasonable because they don't have to spend all the time calculating the daily risk (and the people & computing resources are huge in the UK).

Everyone pays the same, like proper insurance should be. Over a lifetime everyone benefits. Older people pay more than the UK, but generally they can afford it more and the savings younger people make are huge!


*Luxembourg
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 20:09 - 10 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah, from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.

Throw in a 5 Year Plan, and all drivers will be equal, but some drivers will be more equal than others.
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mysterious_rider
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PostPosted: 20:19 - 10 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

quoted on a bmw 318i 1996. I'm 22. And 0 no claims on a car.

£1200 without a black box with tesco insurance

and £1600 with a black box (can't remember who)
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