They can hear you: US buses fitted with eavesdropping equipment


Cities across America are equipping their public transport systems with audio recording devices, potentially storing every word spoken by passengers onboard. Rights activists say the surveillance plan by far exceeds what is necessary for security.

us

­The multimillion dollar upgrade is underway in several US cities, including San Francisco, Eugene, Traverse City, Columbus, Baltimore, Hartford and Athens, reports The Daily, which obtained documents detailing the purchases.

The money partially comes from the federal government. San Francisco, for example, has approved a $5.9 million contract to install the eavesdropping systems on 357 modern buses and historic trolley cars over the next four years, with the Department Homeland Security footing the entire bill. The interception of audio communication will apparently be conducted without search warrants or court supervision, the report says.

The systems would be able to record audio and video from several locations in a bus for simultaneous playback. In Eugene transit officials explicitly demanded microphones capable of distilling clear conversation from the background noise. The recordings would generally be retained for 30 days. One of the systems produced for transport monitoring supports up to 12 high definition cameras, each with a dedicated microphone.

The system may potentially have additional capabilities added like timing the recording with GPS data from an onboard navigator, using facial recognition technology to identify people recorded or connecting wirelessly to a central post for real-time monitoring.

“This technology is sadly indicative of a trend in increased surveillance by commercial and law enforcement entities, under the guise of improved safety,” Ashkan Soltani, an independent security consultant whom the online newspaper asked to review specifications of equipment marketed for transit agencies, told The Daily.

Transport authorities gave various explanations for beefing up surveillance. A San Francisco contractor says the system will “increase passenger safety and improve reliability and maintainability of the system”. An Arkansas transit agency official said it is needed to deflect false complaints from passengers, describing it as “a lifesaver for the drivers”. Maryland officials openly called it a tool for law enforcement.

In some cases the systems are being installed despite resistance of civil liberties activists and lawmakers. In Maryland a legislative committee rejected a bill that would allow the local transport agency to proceed with its plan over concerns that it would violate wiretapping laws. The state’s attorney general advised the transportation agency to use signs warning passengers of the surveillance to help the system withstand a court challenge.

Privacy law experts say audio surveillance systems on buses pushes the boundaries of what is necessary to protect the law.

“It’s one thing to post cops, it’s quite another to say we will have police officers in every seat next to you, listening to everything you say,” said Neil Richards, a professor at Washington University School of Law.

With the microphones, he said, “you have a policeman in every seat with a photographic memory who can spit back everything that was said.”

Public transport is not the only place where citizens are worried about being constantly monitored by keen-eared recording devices. Similar systems combining audio and video recording with wireless connectivity are being installed in lampposts across the US.

Police allowed to track cell phones in US without court warrants


Police allowed to track cell phones in US without court warrants

The US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Americans have no reasonable expectation of privacy when carrying cell phones, allowing police to track GPS signals without a warrant or probable cause.

The decision came the court ruled in United States v. Skinner that the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) abided by the Constitution by using a drug runner’s cellphone data to track his location and determine his identity.

Melvin Skinner, also known by his false name as “Big Foot,” was a drug mule with more than 1,100 pounds of marijuana in his Texas motorhome.

The throwaway mobile phone he was using was registered under a false name, so agents did not know the identity of the drug trafficker.

By using GPS data from his disposable phone, police learned that “Big Foot” was planning to deliver a large shipment of marijuana from Arizona to Tennessee in his mobile home.

In 2006, agents obtained a court order – but not a warrant – to track the disposable phone’s location using its GPS.

After tracing the phone’s exact location, police dogs discovered the mobile home and indicated a presence of drugs. “Big Foot” was arrested and charged for drug trafficking and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

But on appeal, the defendant argued that his cell phone data could not be used because the DEA failed to obtain a warrant for it, thereby violating the Fourth Amendment.

The Fourth Amendment protects against “unreasonable searches and seizures” without the issuance of a warrant obtained due to probable cause.

The Court considers cell phone use to be a public – not private – action, thereby being ineligible for the protections of the Fourth Amendment. A court brief of the case states that “a suspect’s presence in a publicly observable place is not information subject to Fourth Amendment protection.”

Additionally, Judge John M. Rogers, writing for the majority, said Skinner “did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the data given off by his voluntarily procured pay-as-you-go cell phone. If a tool used to transport contraband gives off a signal that can be tracked for location, certainly the police can track the signal.”

While any US cell phone can now be tracked by police without probable cause or a warrant, the Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that police must obtain a warrant before secretly attacking a GPS tracking device to a suspect’s car.

That ruling is currently being contested, leaving the possibility for police to secretly track vehicles without permission. Without the requirement of a warrant to access cell phone data, US authorities are gaining increasing power over what some would consider “private” rights of individuals – but what the Courts call “public.”

 

 

 

Cudworth’s Magic Space Mission using a £30 Camera and a Helium Balloon.


It seems that taking amazing pictures of Earth from space is no longer a task solely for NASA and astronauts on board the International Space Station.
A 19-year old teenager in the UK has managed to take incredible photos of the Earth from space by floating a £30 camera into the atmosphere using a large helium balloon.

In a story that’s a cross between Pixar’s Up and Star Trek, 19-year old Adam Cudworth managed to capture these incredible views on a mere budget of £200.

With just an A-level in Physics to qualify him, Adam was able to construct a home-made device consisting of a box containing a GPS, radio and microprocessor. After 40 hours of working on his gadget (and detailing it all on his blog), Adam attached it to a balloon and it soared to an incredible height of 110,210 ft (33,592m). The device took two and a half hours to get 20 miles up into the atmosphere, before it took impressive views of Earth from space. Adam used a GPS tracker to track the device’s ascension and also an attached radio transmitter to find it when it fell back to earth.

Speaking to The Telegraph, Adam from Ombersley in Worcsestershire  said: “It’s just a bit of hobby really, I just wanted to set myself a challenge – but I’m amazed at the results. I saw a guy who did a similar thing a couple of years back and I just wanted to recreate them – but better.

“I have no background in astrophysics or anything like that, I’m just an engineering student. People think its something that costs millions of pounds but I’ve proved you can do it on just a £200 budget.”

For the photography buffs among you, the camera Adam used was a standard Canon A570 camera which he placed it in an insulated box along with a small video camera, two temperature sensors, two high-performance solar panels, a tracking device, microprocessor and radio. He then attached it to a high-altitude two meter latex balloon with a parachute – and named his contraption HABE 5.

“When I retrieved the camera I was stunned – it had captured some incredible photos and footage,” said Adam. “The exposure settings were different to my previous two attempts and I used materials which would be more robust in extreme temperatures and this led to clearer photos at altitude.

“The on-board video camera recorded great footage close to the ground after launch, however the lens fogged up at about 3km in altitude because moisture got in the lens – but it still looked rather impressive.

“I’m now working on project, which will allow me to control where the box lands when it falls back to earth. But that’s work in progress at the minute and I’ll have to be content with this for now.”

You can Follow him at @adamcudworth

More photograph of Cudworth’s space mission can be found on his Flickr

Video footages of his achievement can be watched from here and here

Eight Hot Social Networks of Future


 

Facebook was the first one to set a benchmark in social networking by showing the world how a simple idea from three Harvard dropouts could change the way the people interact, meet, do business and even sleep. Sites like Pinterest and Foursquare also gained millions of customers following the same path with a slight change of social principles.

Some of the people still think Facebook is the last word in social networking. But check out these budding networks. Even though many of them apply the same social principles- incorporating location based services and binding the people on taste graphs- they help people to meet and socialize, not in digital life, but in real.

In the numerous new social networks, there are a few which stand out on the functionality and beauty by which they attract millions. Mashable had made a list of the best among them, which could be the social networks of the future.

Highlight

Highlight is now the hot topic in social world. The geo location based social app surfaces information about the people who is near you in real time. It runs GPS, 24/ 7 in the background to keep you always connected. With the app, you can simply know everything about the highlight users who are sitting in a football field, if you find some interesting profiles which meet your tastes, you can send them a direct message or “highlight” them so that they will be notified about the same. The privacy features also allows you to be invisible from the rest of users by simply “pausing.”  

Forecast


Here is a service which is definitely for the future. Since all the networks around you keeps a log of your past and present, forecast asks what you plan to do in the future. The developers hope that Forecasting your acting class or yoga section tomorrow night will encourage and inspire other friends to join the fun. Simply, it’s a fun and simple way for friends to share where they’re going.

Fancy

Fancy lets you “fancy” anything in the world. It then files your “fancy’d” products into a sorted digital wish list. The eye catching site is very similar to Pinterest except the fact that you can actually buy the products on Fancy.

Localmind

Localmind is for the local, spontaneous social users. It gathers all the information from the nearby users about events, restaurant specials, offers and attractions happening now. It gathers the location specific information from Facebook and foursquare check-ins. It will also award you with points for providing fruitful information and location advice to others.

Glancee

Glancee helps users to make meaningful connections to new people. It explores the profiles of the people around you to discover the hidden connections including common friends, mutual interests and notify you so that you can meet up and create beautiful connections. It quietly works in the background saving all the information in the app diary regarding your encounters and events.

Sonar

Sonar works in coordination with your Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare accounts. Once after surveying the accounts, Sonar determines your most appropriate connections and it will help you to learn more about the people in vicinity and assist you in activities including networking and online dating.

Path

Path is a smart online journal which helps you share life with your dear ones. You can post everything from your photos, the music you listen to, where you are, who you are with and when you wake and sleep. You can also post these path updates to social networks like Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.

Gogoboat

Gogoboat is like the travel guide Pinterest. You can get tips from the travelers, see where your friends have travelled, and share your own travel stories and photos to help others.

 

Doomsday in 1 Year? Why the World Won’t End on Dec. 21, 2012


the mayan long-count calendar
Some believe the end of the Mayan calendar, Dec. 21, 2012, will usher in a new spiritual era or even a doomsday. And new research suggests the civilization’s demise long ago may have been partly their own doing.
CREDIT: Morphart | Shutterstock

A year from today the world will come to an end, according to some who cite the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar as evidence of a Dec. 21, 2012, apocalypse. But both astronomers and experts on Mesoamerican history say the Mayan apocalypse is likely to be another in a long line of failed doomsdays.

According to the Maya Long Count calendar, the winter solstice of 2012 — Dec. 21, 2012 —is the end of a b’ak’tun, a 144,000-day cycle that has repeated 12 times since the mythical Maya creation date. The b’ak’tun that will end in 2012 is the 13th, supposedly a full 5,200-year cycle of creation.

Because of this end date, a number of predictions have attached themselves to Dec. 21, from the end of the world via collision with a rogue planet, to the ushering in of a new world era. But neither historians nor astronomers put much credence in these predictions. [End of the World? Top Doomsday Fears]

Deciphering the Mayan calendar

In fact, according to archaeologists, it wasn’t the Mayans who linked the end of the 13th b’ak’tun with the end of the world. According to Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History, when Judeo-Christians began to decipher Mayan writings, their preconceived notions of apocalypse and the end of the world led them to link Mayan calendar cycles with doomsday.

“A lot of the end-of-the-world mythologies are the result of Christian eschatology introduced by Franciscan missionaries,” John Hoopes, a scholar of Maya history at the University of Kansas, told Livescience, referring to missionaries just entering the New World andcoming into contact with native people.

Maya scholars disagree on exactly how the Maya people would have interpreted the end of their calendar cycle, Hoopes said, though many say they would have seen it as a new beginning.

Astronomy anomalies

Many of the supposed 2012 doomsday scenarios involve astronomical phenomena: A rogue planet, solar storms or a planetary alignment. But NASA scientists say these aren’t real threats.

One theory holds that a rogue body called “Planet X” or “Nibiru” will collide with Earth in 2012, snuffing out our planet. The only problem with this theory? Nibiru is made up.

“There’s no evidence whatsoever that Nibiru exists,” said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA’s Near-Earth Object program office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., at a public talk Dec. 8. Yeomans said theories that Nibiru is lurking behind our sun make no sense.

“We would have seen it years ago,” he said.

Likewise, Yeomans said, there are no planetary alignments or other astronomical anomalies set for Dec. 21, 2012.

Our stormy sun

One doomsday theory based on perhaps a pinch of science involves the sun. After years of relative peace, the electromagnetic activity on the surface of the sun is heating up, according to NASA. Some fear that an enormous solar flare will engulf Earth or otherwise destroy us.

But this ramping up of activity is typical of our home star, explained Daniel Baker, the director of the laboratory for atmospheric and space physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder, in a talk at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union this month. [Gallery: Our Amazing Sun]

“The sun undergoes an approximately 11-year period of activity,” Baker said. “It goes from very weak conditions, the solar minimum, to some very large solar maximum numbers.”

The sun has been quiet even by solar minimum standards in recent years, Baker said. The upcoming maximum — set to peak in 2013, not 2012 — is expected to be average. Humans do have to watch out for solar storms, which can disrupt satellite communications and electrical grids here on Earth. Nonetheless, industries can prepare for solar storms, which is why agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) have centers whose sole job is to predict these storms’ coming.

Different industries adjust in different ways, said Rodney Viereck of the NOAA Space Environment Center. Airlines that rely on satellite communications will fly at latitudes where alternative forms of communication are possible. Industries dependent on Global Positioning System (GPS) technology will delay crucial activities. Power grids will adjust voltages to handle electromagnetic fluctuations.

2012: Just another year

Finally, theories abound online about one more scientific phenomenon and the 2012 apocalypse: a magnetic pole reversal on Earth. Believers worry that a flip-flop of the Earth’s magnetic field will throw civilization back into the Stone Age, or perhaps destroy all life on the planet, by temporarily dropping the magnetic-field barrier to radiation from space. NASA scientists, however, say Earthlings can rest easy.

According to NASA, the planet’s magnetic field reverses every 200,000 to 300,000 years, though we’ve currently gone more than twice that without a swap.

But these flips don’t happen in an instant, according to the space agency. They occur over hundreds of thousands of years. The last reversal happened 780,000 years ago, according to NASA, and the fossil record shows no sign of any disruption in life.

Stephanie Pappas

Recharge your Phone With a Spoon of Water


“PowerTrekk” a new recharge system developed by Signa Chemistry along with Stockholm‘s myFC produces electricity with a spoon of water which can be used to recharge your phone, GPS devices, iPod/mp3 or camera when you are far away from power outlets. This system doesn’t use sunlight; you just need a tablespoon of water to make it working. Unlike solar chargers PowerTrekk is light weight and generates power more quickly and reliably. More over it doesn’t need clear water, so you can use any type of water whether it is from a stream or a pool, hard water or soft water it really doesn’t matter.

PowerTrekk acts both as a portable battery pack and a fuel cell which makes it a 2-in-1 solution. This 2-in-1 portable charger is the first one to use Mobile-H2 technology (Mobile-H2 cartridge called a PowerPukk) in addition to a Li-ion battery pack. These PowerPukk fuel packs are offered in three forms; 5-pack Tube, 10-pack Tube and 24 ct Tray.

When the PowerPukk is placed inside the PowerTrekk and a tablespoon of water is added to the core part of PowerPukk, then the device’s Proton Exchange Membrane starts to convert the hydrogen into electricity. It can generate an output of 5V, 1000 mA and can store the power in its Li-ion battery if not used right away.

Björn Westerholm, CEO of myFC says “PowerTrekk is one renewable solution where millions of phone users lack easy access to a reliable supply of electricity for charging, especially outdoors and with the PowerTrekk if the internal battery/buffer is full it will charge more than 2 smartphones or 15 iPods.”

The company Signa has major plans based on this system and is determined to see this system working in electric bikes and cars. The company also sees an opportunity in rural parts of the world where there is lack of power supply now and this system can be used as an alternative source. Future of this system seems quite bright as the whole world is trying to find alternatives for power sources along with go green motto.

PowerTrekk comes in three colors;green, red and yellow and is expected to reach the stores by May having a price range of $200 to $250 and the replacement tins (PowerPukk) will cost $4. We expect to see PowerTrekk soon in Indian and hopefully at an affordable price as it will be a boon to Indian villages, but for now the there is no information about its availability or cost in Indian market.

Gadgets That You Wish to be Invented


Technology has traveled a long way over the years; from performing a function of your phone just by tapping your palm to a wireless headphones with hearing aids, is all very much possible today. 3D and Plasma television, GPS navigating systems have become normal trends of the day, with so much of technological inventions at present, where the future of technology is heading too and what is that we want the tech giants to focus on and usher us. Although we have too much to choose from, at times we all wish for gadgets that will relief us from our pain, frustrations and agony.

We went on to ask some professionals, what is the gadget that they wanted to invent and we arrived at some interesting answers from them. Here are best 10 of them.

1. Mind Reader

Mind Reader

It will be interesting to have a gadget that could read people’s mind, this way we do not have to depend on false lie detectors to catch hold of petty thieves. The mind reader can be a great gadget to know people with confidential and private attitude; it can even, at times prevent crimes by tracking any malicious intention.

2. Self Driven Cars

Self Driven Cars

Today cars already have sensors for detecting the surrounding environment and computerized steering. GPS for navigation and a journey little further might take us to cars which are self driven. Imagine this will give you innumerable amount of time to spend on other things instead of worrying about the traffic. It will also be an enormous timesaver.

3. Universal Translator

Universal Translator

If you are a traveler, you would definitely want to have a universal translator which could translate any language for you.

This gadget can break all the language barriers that we have today.

4. Gadget popping your favorite chocolate/drinks

Gadget popping your favorite chocolate

This is something every chocolate/drinks lover would want, have sometime or the other wished for.

5. Time Machine

Time Machine

This is one gadget with has been very much flaunted in novels and movies, but yet to become a reality. Imagine if you could go back on time and rectify some of your mistakes, or meet your dear ones that you have lost.

6. Virtually Invisible

Virtually Invisible

The scenario of the world would have been very diverse if we had gadgets to be virtually invisible. Sci -fi movies like Hollow  man in Hollywood, and Mr. India in Bollywood has brought out the negative and positive impacts of a gadget that allows one to be invisible. It would also be a fun thing to have for practical jokes on your friends.

7. Flying skate boards and shoes

skate boards and shoes

Every one of us has definitely imagined how it will be to fly. We would like to have gadgets that can make this dream come true.

8. Teleporter

Teleporter

Everyone wants to get where they’re going, faster, with less time in airplanes and security lines. Scientists have managed to teleport information using the principles of quantum physics but they have not been able to transport a human. It would have been a huge time saving affair if teleporting of human were possible.
There may be innumerable types of gadget wish list. Do share with us what gadget you would like to see in future.

9. Gadgets to Cure Wounds

Gadgets to Cure Wounds

The medical world needs constant invention; imagine a gadget that can heal open wounds of our kids who are often prone to such injuries. These will surely revolutionaries the health care sector. It would be tremendously useful to soldiers or anyone else who works out in the field.

10. Food Synthesizer

Food Synthesizer

Foods Synthesizer that can recreate any food or beverage at the touch of a button can be an awesome gadget to look out for in the near future. A food synthesizer would come in handy for those always on the go or for those who simply can’t cook. Think of it as having all of your favorite restaurants and your mom’s kitchen in a vending machine in your own room.

10 Car Accessories That Could Be Dangerous


A car is an extension of the person driving it. And if you’re like most Americans, you see yourself as individual and unique — not simply a cookie-cutter floor model, but packed with personality and experiences that make you, you. The same can be true of your car — that is, if you’re willing to take that floor model and run with it.

With a car, if you can dream it, you can do it, from lifting, resculpting and refitting to an almost infinite number and variety of add-ons.

But beware: While manufacturers build with safety in mind, standards are less strict for aftermarket accessories and sometimes nonexistent for DIY projects. When adding personality to your vehicle, be sure you aren’t also adding danger. Let’s take a look at some risky car accessories.

 

10: Lift Kit

Even more important than the laws of country and state are the laws of the universe. And it doesn’t take Isaac Newton to tell you that top-heavy things like to flip. When you use a lift kit to boost your car’s center of gravity, it’s like resting a coin on its edge rather than on its face. The higher the boost, the more prone the car is to flipping.

In fact, one braking test study found that raising the suspension of a 1992 Ford F-150 by 4 inches (10 centimeters), lifting the body by 3 inches (7.6 centimeters) and adding 38-inch (96.5-centimeter) tires increased the likelihood of flipping by more than 30 percent and reduced braking performance by 25 percent .

And it’s not simply your own life that a lift kit endangers. Cars protect you best when they hit bumper to bumper. But in a collision, your lifted truck is likely to put its nose through the other driver’s window, making the crash much more severe.

Sure, jacking your ride could be totally boss (as your kids might say), but you may want to think twice before making your truck a monster.

 

9: Colored Fog Lights

Cars with lights on a foggy night
Stick with the standard-issue fog lights on your car — they’re safer for other drivers.

The thought on colored fog lights runs something like this: White light, made up of all the colors in the light spectrum, refracts through fog in weird and wild ways, lighting up the foggy sky in front of you like a bright, blank screen. But yellow light (with a longer wavelength and high sensitivity by the human eye) refracts in only one way, so while fog continues to make things a little blurry, using yellow light cuts through the fog much better than your manufacturer-issued headlights.

Unfortunately, that’s not true. The Ask a Scientist program at the U.S. Department of Energy explains that for a variety of reasons (including the relatively large size of fog droplets when compared with wavelengths of light), the only advantage of yellow fog lights is that they may look better to some people .

And they have a distinct disadvantage: distracting oncoming drivers. Perhaps you think it’s reasonable to draw the attention of drivers behind and around you, but do you really want to distract a driver who’s heading straight at you?

 

8: Dash-mounted TV Screens

A 2009 Nielsen report found that the average American watches 151 hours of television per month . You can do the math: That’s about 5 hours of TV every day. And today more than ever, Americans are even unwilling to unplug in the car.

It takes only a quick online search to find a plethora of DIY, how-to articles teaching drivers to install TV screens either in holes in the dashboard commonly occupied by radios or as stand-alone monitors that sit atop the dashboard.

Unfortunately, these screens are not only for backseat child viewing and for passenger entertainment anymore.

States like Virginia and Illinois expressly prohibit the installation of television viewing systems in the front areas of cars, and more states are following suit. But do you really need a law to tell you this is a bad idea? Unplug from the tube for the time it takes you to get from point A to point B, and you and your fellow drivers will be much safer.

7: GPS Systems

Car with GPS mounted on windshield 

A GPS can be both a source of distraction and a potential projectile.

Sure, a GPS is a distraction, but you have to know where you’re going, and it’s better than trying to read a map while zipping down the road, right? Wrong. A study by Privilege Insurance found that 19 percent of GPS users were distracted when driving as opposed to only 17 percent of traditional map users .

While much of this distraction can be remedied by practicing with your GPS and programming a destination prior to take off, an aftermarket GPS introduces two more dangers: the limited sight line and the projectile. If you didn’t see that stepladder in the middle of the road, it could be because in that critical split second, your view was blocked by your dash-mounted GPS. And that suction cup is unlikely to keep your GPS screen attached to the dash in a crash, rendering it a potentially dangerous projectile.

Think again before installing a GPS. And if you need food for thought, check out this episode of Mythbusters, which explores the power of in-car projectiles.

6: Cup Holders

Drinking and driving is dangerous, and that applies not only to alcoholic drinks but to all manner of beverages. Heading Insurance.com’s list of the top-10 most dangerous foods to consume while driving is coffee, which (as you may have noticed) is not only damp, but can be exceedingly hot. There’s nothing that induces mad swerving (and uncontrolled profanity) like boiling hot coffee in your lap. Also making the list of killer foods are soft drinks, due to both spillage and something that Insurance.com calls an unacceptable risk of “fizz up your nose” .

What this means is that it’s probably not a good idea to eat or drink while driving. And nothing says “I drink and drive” like the addition of an aftermarket cup holder. As if there wasn’t already enough chance of you dropping your drink in your lap, add to it the chance that your jury-rigged holder will detach from the vent where it hangs by the smallest of hooks and become something else to roll around under your feet.

 

5: Limo Tints

Silver car with tinted windows
You may think tinted windows look cool, but they cause reduced visibility, posing a danger to you, other drivers and pedestrians.

Not only do tinted windows block 65 percent of the sun’s heat and 99.9 percent of its damaging ultraviolet rays, but many think they’re (like a couple other entries on this list) totally boss. Though most states ban windshield and front-window tinting, you can still have your back windows tinted.

But even if the law gives you the green light, be sure to weigh the perceived awesomeness of tinted windows against the danger before taking your car to the local detail shop. The risk of reducing visibility out your back windows is obvious — say hello to sideswipes during lane changes. Less obvious, but no less dangerous, is the reduced eye contact with pedestrians and other drivers that tinting creates. How often do you wave another driver through a four-way stop, meet eyes with a pedestrian waiting at a crosswalk or use other types of sign language to signal your intentions and emotions to drivers around you? With tinted windows, you can kiss this communication goodbye.

4: Blackout Kits

Apparently, some car enthusiasts have decided that breaking the flow and uniform color of a car’s body with holes for things like lights is unseemly. Especially in the forums of Corvette and Mustang fans, you can find instructions and kits for smoothing over distracters like reverse lights, driving lights and even head- and taillights. Many of these blackouts are illegal on street-driven cars and are intended only for display or showroom use.

But again, should we really need laws that stop us from blacking out headlights? For those still scratching their heads: Lights were put on cars for a reason, namely so that you can see where you’re going, other drivers can see you and you can signal your intentions to change your path to other drivers. Going into stealth mode on the road may seem like fun, but so does becoming a ninja hit man, and if you’ve ever seen old kung fu movies, you know that ninja hit men never live very long.

 

3: Utility Trailers

Truck pulling trailer on highway
Think twice before towing a trailer — they’re one of the deadliest car accessories on the market.

Is an add-on car or truck trailer really an accessory? For the purpose of this article, yes, mainly because it’s one of the most deadly post-market add-ons any vehicle can take on. USA Today reports that more than one person per day is killed in the United States due to crashes in or with passenger vehicles towing trailers . The highest cause of trailer fatality is when poorly secured trailers break loose and careen or roll into traffic. This means that when you tow a trailer, it’s usually not your own life you’re taking into your hands. It’s the lives of random passing motorists who may be unprepared for your trailer to come skidding through a red light.

Also, drivers who only tow trailers once in a blue moon are likely to forget the trailer is there, meaning that they forget to take the extra length of the vehicle into account when turning or changing lanes.

2: In-car Microwave

While not especially prevalent, the microwave powered by your car’s cigarette lighter plug-in is both so awesome and so obviously a bad idea that this list would simply be incomplete without it. With so many commuters stuck in traffic and trying to multitask on the way to work, a surprising number of manufacturers have jumped into mini-microwave creation .

In fact, the mini microwave of death is but one in a category of dangerous in-car appliances that allow you to do things in your vehicle that you really should have done at home, including refrigerators, popcorn poppers, Wi-Fi routers, a range of personal grooming equipment and, of course, coffee makers. Your car should be for getting you from place to place, not for preparing meals and going through your daily getting-ready-for-work routine.

Though not technically an in-car accessory, some have even tried the addition of an under-car deep fryer, which also seems like a recipe for disaster.

1: Musical Car Horn

Woman's hand hitting car horn

Musical car horns can be very disctracting to other drivers — stick with the classic honk your car comes with!

There are a number of ways to make nearly any song you want come out of your smart phone. Now the same is true of car horns. For example, the Web site zercustoms.com allows you to install and then download a car horn system that plays selections from a variety of themes, including Christmas, reggae or tailgate. Some musical car horns are even set up to play MP3s .

Note that these systems are different from car PA systems, in which you play or speak whatever you like through a handheld microphone system. No, these musical car horns augment or replace your car’s existing horn.

Imagine a driver drifting into your lane on the freeway, at which point you go to warn him with your horn — only it plays Lady Gaga. Do you think this driver is more likely to get out of the way immediately or to be distracted and make a critical error? There are enough distractions on the road without adding musical horns to the mix.