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"How's my teen driving?"
American's have always had a thing for bumper stickers, but now they are taking them further than simply political or sexy messages.
You may have seen those "How's my driving?" stickers on lorries in the UK. If you didn't know, putting one of them on reduces motor insurance premiums because the belief is that someone is going to drive better if they know they could be shopped by an irate motorist behind them (although what with the laws on using mobile phones, you've got to wonder how often someone actually calls that number).
Now our cousins from the other side of the pond are adding those bumper stickers to cars driven by teenagers. But instead of instances of dodgy driving being fed back to an insurance company; it goes back to the teen's parents (who pay for the service).
I can't work out if it's a good idea or not. In a sense, having a shop-a-bad-driver number is far less of an instrusive method than other ideas such as GPS tracking or monitoring systems that log all driving activity; not just the bit that is bad. Equally, I'd far prefer teenagers get the chance to drive with the risk of being caught than the current strategy in the UK which seems to be reduce the risk by eliminating the opportunity (ie increasing the age you can legally drive).
Would it work in this country? We're less likely to let young drivers have their own cars so parents would probably have to deal with having a sticker on their own car.
So, would you be happy to have a sticker so some random stranger would be able to shop you for speeding or having your music too loud?
(reported in Boston Globe, via YPulse)
Posted by Olly ( 2:46 PM ) Link to this post | Comments[1]




Posted by Gavin Reynolds on October 02, 2008 at 12:15 PM GMT+00:00 #