It is an implicit assumption, when buying a car, that it is not trivial to start the car without said key.
If you paid $2000 for a security door, just for the door to be opened by anyone with a credit card, would you not feel defrauded?
Or would you make a sorry jab at the culture of the people doing the harm, to play pretend devil's advocate in bad faith, just to stroke your petty ego, trying to induce a culture war?
Tell me why I'm wrong. [I totally deserve everyone's attention by the way! Look at me!!!11!]
Have lock smiths and people in prisons demonstrate how good/bad locks are.
Set up a rating system from say 0 to 100 where 0 is unlocked and anything that opens instantly using small hand tools is considered unlocked.
All locks get a rating of 5 until an official time is set. The videos are not shared but the current best time is published along with a statement from the manufacturer if they desire it.
A special tax for everyone to drive a vehicle that is considered unlocked as a permanent reminder and to pay for all of the above. While low at first, if there are few unlocked cars driving around the tax is higher.
It's a probability distribution. I can get most residentials' + deadlock in 30 seconds total 25% of the time, just by raking (brute forcing) pin key combinations, 80% of most in under 3 minutes; switching to rake with a different wavelength shortens that, especially when a familiarity is developed, let alone picking.
But that's not even the issue -- especially moot since porcelain exists.
Similar to the (overly strong-handed) back-up camera mandate regulations, auto manufactures should be held to a higher standard for the most critical aspect of the vehicle: the authorization and authentication of its user is the intended operator.
There are tons of features on a car that countries force manufacturers to install, if they want to sell the car in that country. So, no America isn't forcing anyone to do anything. Of course is Kia wants to sell the car on America...
But they don't have to install it on non American cars. For example a couple of years ago America mandated backup cameras. Some countries still get cars without backup cameras
It is an implicit assumption, when buying a car, that it is not trivial to start the car without said key.
If you paid $2000 for a security door, just for the door to be opened by anyone with a credit card, would you not feel defrauded?
Or would you make a sorry jab at the culture of the people doing the harm, to play pretend devil's advocate in bad faith, just to stroke your petty ego, trying to induce a culture war?
Tell me why I'm wrong. [I totally deserve everyone's attention by the way! Look at me!!!11!]