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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Texting bans appear to increase the risk of driving accidents

A study published this week by researchers at the Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI) in the USA has found that laws banning texting while driving aren't reducing the number of accidents. Instead, there appears to be a slight increase in the number of collisions.

The HLDI survey looked at insurance claims in California, Louisiana, Minnesota and Washington before and after 'texting bans' were introduced. (Most US states now have similar laws). Data was also collected in nearby states where text/driving laws remained relatively unchanged.

Month-to-month changes in the rates of collision claims didn't alter much from before the bans to after the bans were put in place – and the patterns didn't differ much from those in nearby states that didn't ban texting. Any changes in crash rates showed an accident increase in the text-ban states, from 1% more crashes in Washington to around 9% in Minnesota. Younger drivers – those more likely to send SMS text messages when driving – were more likely to have accidents following the ban, with a 12% increase noted in California.

The HDLI's survey also indicates that many drivers, especially younger ones, are ignoring the bans, with 45% of 18-24 year-olds in states with a text/driving ban saying they were breaking the law.

Adrian Lund, president of the HLDI, said "Texting bans haven't reduced crashes at all. In a perverse twist, crashes increased in 3 of the 4 states we studied after bans were enacted. It's an indication that texting bans might even increase the risk of texting for drivers who continue to do so despite the laws. The point of texting bans is to reduce crashes, and by this essential measure the laws are ineffective."

"If drivers were disregarding the bans, then the crash patterns should have remained steady. So clearly drivers did respond to the bans somehow, and what they might have been doing was moving their phones down and out of sight when they texted, in recognition that what they were doing was illegal. This could exacerbate the risk of texting by taking drivers' eyes further from the road and for a longer time."

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Opinion Articles

T-Mobile, the Information Commissioner's Office and the stolen customer information

Mark Bridge writes:

The Information Commissioner's Office - the UK authority that upholds information rights - has published details of its recent case involving T-Mobile. Contact information and expiry dates for minimum-term contracts were being sold to third parties, enabling mobile phone dealers to target potential customers who were in a position to sign a new contract... which could earn the dealer hundreds of pounds for a new connection.

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This week at The Fonecast: 11th June 2011

Mark Bridge writes:

On Monday there seemed to be a dearth of mobile news as the industry held its breath and waited for Steve Jobs to speak.

Why there was quite so much breath-holding beats me, because Apple had already told us what the announcement was going to cover. Anyway, we learned about iOS 5, which will arrive in the autumn, and its 200 new features – including a new messaging service called iMessage.

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Interview with Todd Levy about the family-friendly BloomWorlds Android app store

Mark Bridge writes:

Today's best-known stores mobile application stores are the Apple App Store and the Android Market, although independent app stores including GetJar and Handango have been with us for much longer.

And now there's another independent application store preparing to launch. The company behind it is called BloomWorlds – and I spoke to co-founder Todd R Levy for this week's podcast feature.

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Soon, no-one will care about mobile phone numbers - and the networks will love it

Mark Bridge writes:

Watch almost any American TV show from the 1960s - I'd recommend a good police procedural - and at some point after a few episodes there'll be a scene in a restaurant. One of the main characters will be dining and their meal will be interrupted by a waiter bringing a telephone to the table. The phone will probably have an implausibly long cable, although there may be a telephone socket nearby.

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Apple iMessage isn't going to kill SMS

Mark Bridge writes:

Apple iMessage is going to kill SMS. And then, when it's killed it, it'll dance on its grave. Anticlockwise. Whilst mocking every mobile network in the world.

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