How bad is Android Auto for privacy on a stock Pixel phone. What can the car and car vendor get access to.
36 comments
Android Auto is just a projection of the information on your phone so, as far as I know, it's as private as your phone is.
Of course there's always the possibility that the vehicle itself is doing a screen capture and processing the information on the display to send back to their servers but...seems unlikely on account of the processing power required for that.
I was recently very interested to learn that, if I run a VPN on my phone, Auto immediately calls out the VPN as a problem and refuses to connect to my car until it's disconnected.
I think this has something to do with how networking works.
When connected wireless to my car with a VPN active on my phone, my phone won't connect to my cars WiFi network to initiate the android auto connection.
When connected by USB with VPN active on my phone it's not issue, android auto connects and my VPN is active.
I remember seeing someone smarter explain this a lot better online somewhere then I can at the moment. But simply trying to connect wireless with a VPN active will not work.
I'm guessing Android Auto wireless. And if so it makes perfect sense. You can't route everything through a VPN when your connecting to a device with a local network.
I've found that if my VPN is disconnected when I first connect to Android Auto, connecting it after the fact won't cause it to freak out.
My VPN automatically turns on when I'm connected to anything but my home network, so if I start my car at home, when I lose wifi and connect to the cell network I don't have issues.
Is that android auto or wireless android auto?
I just ran into this too. Had to whitelist the app. Felt dirty and probably is...
Android auto provides notification content to the car. Also of course a virtual screen.
So, there is not much that may be an issue. And you don't habe to share your contact data with your car if you want to do hands free calls. That's a plus
I'd like to hear more about this. When I went to setup Auto on my vehicle, it demanded that I copy all contact information to the head unit, or it would not proceed with pairing and setup. That's when I just shrugged and disconnected my phone. Bluetooth works just fine for me
That may be ab implementation detail of android auto for your car manufacturer. I never needed to sync the contacts in BMW and VW.
I had some troubles with Ford, but there It worked via USB instead of Bluetooth pairing without forced sync.
Edit: I am in Germany, so data protection laws may also be a reason why it works for me
I'm guessing Google sell your driving data to insurers?
Per Mozilla, they're already getting that from the car manufacturers.
Except my car is old, and doesn't share it. So this would enable sharing for older vehicles.
It requires a Google account so pretty bad.
You can enable it on GrapheneOS AFAIK.
Works just fine on grapheneOS
If this is the case that's awesome and I had no idea.
Android Auto is just a projection of the information on your phone so, as far as I know, it's as private as your phone is.
Of course there's always the possibility that the vehicle itself is doing a screen capture and processing the information on the display to send back to their servers but...seems unlikely on account of the processing power required for that.
I was recently very interested to learn that, if I run a VPN on my phone, Auto immediately calls out the VPN as a problem and refuses to connect to my car until it's disconnected.
I think this has something to do with how networking works.
When connected wireless to my car with a VPN active on my phone, my phone won't connect to my cars WiFi network to initiate the android auto connection.
When connected by USB with VPN active on my phone it's not issue, android auto connects and my VPN is active.
I remember seeing someone smarter explain this a lot better online somewhere then I can at the moment. But simply trying to connect wireless with a VPN active will not work.
I'm guessing Android Auto wireless. And if so it makes perfect sense. You can't route everything through a VPN when your connecting to a device with a local network.
I've found that if my VPN is disconnected when I first connect to Android Auto, connecting it after the fact won't cause it to freak out.
My VPN automatically turns on when I'm connected to anything but my home network, so if I start my car at home, when I lose wifi and connect to the cell network I don't have issues.
Is that android auto or wireless android auto?
I just ran into this too. Had to whitelist the app. Felt dirty and probably is...