Exactly!
Take it up with the dealer. @Aaron_N had a shocking experience with this and put in a formal complaint. The Hyundai Headshed met with him and there was apology and compensation. They took it seriously.Just had my first (10,000 mile) service. That is basically an oil change and tell you that your tyres are worn out.
No other diagnostics requested (standard charge of £51 is somewhat offputting).
Dealer put 14 miles on at 21.6 mpg.
I know that @_Emma posted similar but I can't find that post.
Anyone else have similar?
Take it up with the dealer. @Aaron_N had a shocking experience with this and put in a formal complaint. The Hyundai Headshed met with him and there was apology and compensation.
@WestsideTouge a few people have said they unplug them or put stickers on them
Telling them there’s a tracker and if it goes off the forecourt you’ll report it stolen works...
Get some sleep young Lady! on a similar note, back in the eighties My C.B handle was 33% polyester!Turnips.
Don’t ask why I’ve decided calling people random food names is a good way to insult them...it’s been a long week. Favourite one so far is ham sandwich. I’m not right in the head![]()
Get some sleep young Lady! on a similar note, back in the eighties My C.B handle was 33% polyester!
@WestsideTouge a few people have said they unplug them or put stickers on them.
Good point. But then they could see how awesome I amRe: Dashcam unplugging etc. Perhaps it's an Aussie thing (privacy issue/law), but look at it this way. How would you feel about people watching and recording the work you're doing at your workplace?
Re: Dashcam unplugging etc. Perhaps it's an Aussie thing (privacy issue/law), but look at it this way. How would you feel about people watching and recording the work you're doing at your workplace?
No problem with it...because I don’t do things I’m not meant to do (or I make sure I’m out of camera shot when I do them)
I see what you’re saying (and I certainly don’t think tech’s should be unplugging dash cams - one did this to my mum’s car once and didn’t re-plug it and she nearly had a serious accident on the way home and consequently no footage to prove the dangerous driving by someone else) but in general the whole argument of nothing to hide, nothing to fear when it comes to surveillance and privacy is really detrimental to what should be a basic human right.
Other, far smarter people than me have some interesting counter points against it (although the slant is from the mass surveillance perspective):
https://www.openrightsgroup.org/blog/2015/responding-to-nothing-to-hide-nothing-to-fear
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nothing_to_hide_argument?wprov=sfti1