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r/MotorBuzz8d ago
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People Are Genuinely Worried Their Chinese Cars Are Spying on Them
Growing numbers of drivers question whether vehicles from BYD, MG, and Polestar are collecting data and sending it back to China.
A growing number of people are worried that Chinese manufactured cars might be spying on them, according to Car Dealer Magazine. The concern centres on whether vehicles from brands like BYD, MG, and Polestar are collecting driver data and potentially transmitting it to servers in China. What was once dismissed as paranoia now surfaces in showroom conversations and social media threads with increasing regularity.
The anxiety is not entirely baseless. Modern vehicles, regardless of origin, collect staggering amounts of information. Location data, driving patterns, biometric information from seat sensors and facial recognition cameras, smartphone synchronization records, and even microphone recordings. Chinese automakers have expanded aggressively into European markets, where they now account for approximately 8 to 10 percent of new car sales in some regions. That success means more people are choosing these vehicles for their price and features, then lying awake wondering what those vehicles know about them.
Car Dealer Magazine reports that the fears reflect broader geopolitical tensions around Chinese technology. The same governments that banned Huawei from 5G networks and threatened TikTok with shutdown orders have turned their attention to connected vehicles. In 2024, the US government banned Chinese vehicles from federal fleets, citing cybersecurity concerns. UK and EU regulators followed with questions about data security in connected cars, though without implementing outright bans.
The issue is that every connected car, Chinese or otherwise, vacuums up data. Tesla vehicles record video footage from multiple cameras. Ford admitted its cars listen to conversations to serve targeted advertising. The difference is not technical capability but trust, and trust is shaped by politics as much as engineering. A car from SAIC Motor, which owns MG, raises questions that a mechanically similar vehicle from a European or Japanese manufacturer does not.
Buyers face an uncomfortable calculus. Chinese electric vehicles often undercut rivals on price while matching or exceeding them on technology. BYD, Polestar, and others offer competitive range, rapid charging, and feature sets that would cost thousands more from established brands. The trade off, real or perceived, is privacy. Some dismiss the concern as xenophobia dressed up as security awareness. Others point to China's National Intelligence Law, which compels organizations to support state intelligence work when asked.
The Biden administration moved beyond theory in 2024 with restrictions on Chinese connected vehicle technology. The rules targeted software and hardware that could enable remote access or data exfiltration, effectively acknowledging that the threat was not hypothetical. DJI drones faced similar restrictions from the US Department of Defense over surveillance concerns. Huawei was banned from critical infrastructure. The pattern suggests that when Chinese technology connects to networks and collects data, governments assume the worst.
European regulators have been more measured, but the questions persist. The European Commission launched an investigation into Chinese electric vehicle subsidies, though focused on trade rather than security. Still, the data privacy issue hovers in the background. A car is not a smartphone. It knows where you live, where you work, where your children go to school, and which routes you take to get there. It records your voice, your face, and potentially your conversations. Whether that information stays within the vehicle or travels to a server farm in Shenzhen is a question most buyers cannot answer.
Chinese automakers insist their data practices comply with local regulations, including Europe's General Data Protection Regulation. SAIC Motor, Geely, and BYD have all issued statements emphasizing their commitment to data security and transparency. The problem is that compliance with regulation does not address the deeper fear, which is not about what companies are legally allowed to do but what they might be compelled to do by a government with different priorities.
The concerns mirror those raised about Tesla, which collects equally comprehensive data and is controlled by a man whose companies hold US government contracts and whose behaviour is unpredictable. The difference is that Elon Musk, however erratic, operates within a legal and political framework familiar to Western buyers. Chinese manufacturers operate within a framework that is not, and that unfamiliarity breeds suspicion.
For now, the worry remains more prevalent than the evidence. No credible reports have surfaced of Chinese vehicles transmitting data to state intelligence services or being used for surveillance. The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, but it does suggest that if spying is occurring, it is subtle enough to evade detection by security researchers and government agencies actively looking for it. Whether that reassures anyone is another matter entirely.
Sources: Car Dealer Magazine