373 points by sylvainkalache 7 days ago | 878 comments on HN
| Mild positive Moderate agreement (3 models)
Editorial · v3.7· 2026-03-15 22:26:07 0
Summary Environmental Justice & Market Power Advocates
TechCrunch article analyzing Honda's discontinuation of electric vehicles engages implicitly with human rights themes related to environmental justice, access to information, and competitive market participation. Content authored by climate specialist with strong institutional credentials, supporting editorial credibility. However, structural privacy violations—including extensive behavioral tracking, marketing attribution capture, and bot detection without visible user consent—significantly undermine rights protection on the platform hosting this advocacy.
Rights Tensions2 pairs
Art 12 ↔ Art 19 —Privacy surveillance infrastructure (Article 12) enabling behavioral tracking contradicts editorial freedom and transparency in public discourse (Article 19) by creating asymmetric information environment where readers' engagement patterns monitored without disclosed consent.
Art 12 ↔ Art 25 —Behavioral tracking and data appropriation (Article 12) diverts user information without compensation, undermining welfare protections (Article 25) by enabling targeted commercial exploitation based on health/preference inferences.
The wind is just blowing back towards internal combustion for the moment. A couple years and they will shift again. Killing the whole research project would be dumb. Killing current models makes some sense.
Ironically, Trump attacking Iran and closing the Strait is a boon to China and EV makers. Once the car is produced, aside from lubricants, it’s completely independent of oil. Heck you can put panels on your rooftop and slow charge it during the day.
Honda is an engine company at its heart. It makes very reliable, long lived engines.
They refine technology not really invent it (maybe invented VTEC). The transition to EV will be very gradual, I don’t even think we have enough rare earth metals and electrical grid capacity to go even twice as fast in adoption?
Honda is waiting for the standards and technology to settle out and become commodity technology, then they implement and iterate to a refined and reliable product.
It doesn’t seem like a winner take all market for EV? What would be the most? Perhaps I am ignorant on that part of market dynamics.
Do people really want "software defined vehicles"? People keep repeating how Tesla keeps upgrading their software, but I don't really want my car to change every time I step into it.
The person I know who loves FSD has soured on updates since the last one changed how the car handles simple things like intersections, and it's added a lot more stress.
Cars should be appliances, boring and reliable, not something to amaze and delight you. Especially since the latter usually changes into "sell ads and your personal information".
I hate those narratives that if you don't jump on EVs, your future is doomed.
The last 5 years just don't show it. The EV market is still small and infrastructure missing in most of the world.
Toyota played it safe and made bank when everybody was saying they were doomed.
German automakers went hard on EVs. VW group sold 1 million fully electric vehicles in 2025, they will probably overtake Tesla in a couple of years for the biggest non-Chinese EV automaker by sales, but is it paying off financially?
At the same time german premium brands have a very hard time differentiating when Chinese cars offer similar quality at half the price even after tariffs.
Smart doorbells and thermostats that upgraded in the night often became a nuisance or an expensive brick. But a faulty software upgrade on a car can kill you and others.
Car company execs need to take a chill pill followed by a reality serum. Monetizing subscription based basic features and delivering in-car advertising is the absolutely worst way to go.
As consumers we need to stop buying into the bells, whistles and trinkets and demand essential and safe transportation.
“Many automakers have found that dropping batteries into a car originally designed for an internal combustion engine”. Reminds me of idiotic hybrid variants of Subaru and Honda vehicles that don’t have spare tires because the battery was slapped into the existing vehicle platform as an afterthought. Eg. Subaru forester hybrid. Car bought by educated, practical folks.
The biggest EV car is Tesla and they aren't good and tesla isn't a car company, its a finance comapny. Like Intel lost its edge because it became finance first engineering almost never. And no one wants a >$20k car. Disposable energy oil or not, manufacturers went nuts in 2020, and just kept pushing prices up and can't figure out why cars aren't selling.
Once EVs are economically attractive the transition can be very fast. I live in Denmark so I have seen it, it took 7 years to go from ~5% to 90+% of new cars sold. Both EU and US are now relying on trade barriers to keep Chinese EVs away from consumers.
Sadly, this view is considered antiquated and anti-technology by a younger generation of people who think what we see in sci-fi shows should be reality (good or bad). And if you don't get that vision then you're some dumb luddite who should be banished from society.
What's kind of remarkable is the onslaught of vehicles, many EV, which have critical functionality issues that are being ignored, but they have WiFi + hotspot on board! And if you want to do basic things with your own vehicle, like get the climate control ready before you leave on a trip you now need an app, a smartphone, and Internet connection and a subscription...to do things that could easily be done via some local BLE or WiFi connection.
I see a lot of car companies rush to make "immersive" driving experiences while neglecting the basics. The Ioniq 5 / EV6 have ICCU issues that are not addressed which can leave the car stranded and the replacement parts have the same mysterious failure modes, the Jaguar I-Pace had numerous failures including a UI that would lag for basic things like changing air conditioning settings, the last generation Leaf (just prior to the current re-design) has battery issues that have forced people to do lemon-law buy backs, the Ford Mach E has a Tesla-style iPad center display that can't be turned off at night so it's a distraction (among other issues with the poor concept), but it has OTA so awesome!
> Do people really want "software defined vehicles"?
Absolutely, the sooner the better. The truth is, auto companies can track you, show you ads, and otherwise jerk you around without going all the way to having a "software defined vehicle." You just get a worse user experience.
> I don’t even think we have enough rare earth metals and electrical grid capacity to go even twice as fast in adoption?
This is not an issue, it’s the one the things that the anti-EV/baby boomer crowd throws out that is completely unsubstantiated. We have plenty of rare earths, America just lit their rare earth refining capacity on fire when China said they would do it for us at a much cheaper price. China doesn’t have a shortage of rare earth refining capacity, and they are producing most of the Eavs in the world as a result. EVs mostly charge at night when the grid is underutilized anyways.
China won the EV war a few years ago while the Japanese spent too much wasted time on hydrogen. Honda just doesn’t have anything to offer that BYD already does much better. That the Chinese auto manufacturers will slow down EV advancements and refinements long enough for Honda to make a significant improvement is a bit ridiculous.
Is your point that the western car companies are doomed no matter how aggressively they jump into EVs now, and that Chinese EV producers have too much of a lead for them to recover, or that they have time to catch up later and can take it slow for now?
China is already selling EVs to countries that haven’t even had many cars before, like Nepal. Is 75% of the world car market just going to be there’s because western auto manufacturers overfixated on their own very mature car markets?
All the updates (so far…) have added features that I actually like. Things like Apple Music integration and even safety things like cross-traffic alerts when reversing.
Even today my wife left her phone on the charge pad and the car beeped as we walked away to alert us - a feature that didn’t exist when we first got it.
Enshittification may come, but maybe there will be an Apple-like benevolent dictator that keeps it mostly clean.
Edit: I should say that I will never trust any “self-driving” at all based on cameras alone. It can’t even do Autopilot without me intervening on most trips.
Content engages in public discourse on automotive industry decisions with potential climate and competitive implications. Author holds position as 'senior climate reporter' indicating advocacy orientation toward climate-related reporting. Article appears to present critical analysis of corporate strategy. However, full article text not provided, limiting assessment of evidentiary support, counterargument engagement, or editorial balance.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Author identified as 'senior climate reporter' with specialist expertise in environmental journalism.
Article includes 'Exclusive' tag suggesting claimed investigative or original reporting.
Schema NewsArticle markup includes datePublished and dateModified timestamps enabling verification of publication timing.
Byline includes author email contact (tim.dechant@techcrunch.com) enabling direct communication.
Article categories ('Climate,' 'Transportation') and tags ('Analysis,' 'electric vehicles,' 'honda,' 'software defined vehicle') enable topic-based discovery.
Page footer contains social media links (Facebook, X/Twitter, Mastodon, Bluesky, Threads) suggesting platform support for information redistribution.
Inferences
Author's climate specialist role suggests editorial orientation toward environmental advocacy within news reporting.
Investigative framing ('Exclusive') and 'Analysis' label indicate content intended as persuasive commentary rather than neutral reporting.
Tracking infrastructure and analytics capture reading patterns without visible user opt-out, creating structural tension between editorial freedom and audience surveillance.
Article addresses automotive industry decision affecting transportation access and implicitly health outcomes through environmental (climate) pathways. Author's expertise in climate reporting suggests awareness of health-welfare connections. However, full content analysis not possible from provided metadata.
FW Ratio: 75%
Observable Facts
Article categorized under 'Climate,' indicating environmental-health nexus engagement.
Author specializes in climate reporting, suggesting expertise in environment-welfare connections.
Page accessible without payment or membership requirement.
Inferences
Climate expertise positioning suggests awareness of health impacts of environmental decisions covered.
Article addresses a corporate decision impacting the automotive industry and climate transition pathway. Content frames Honda's EV discontinuation as consequential for broader competitive dynamics and implicitly for environmental outcomes, invoking themes of dignity and human welfare relevant to sustainable development framing in UDHR preamble.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Article headline states 'Honda is killing its EVs — and any chance of competing in the future,' using hyperbolic language.
Author Tim De Chant identified with institutional affiliation (MIT lecturer) and credential statement (PhD environmental science, Berkeley).
Content categorized under 'Climate' and 'Transportation' sections.
Article marked 'Exclusive' and 'Analysis,' distinguishing editorial intent.
Inferences
The framing of corporate automotive decisions as having dignity-related consequences reflects an implicit human rights awareness.
Institutional credentials and climate focus suggest editorial orientation toward environmental justice themes connected to human welfare.
Content does not explicitly address discrimination or non-discrimination principles. Analysis of corporate automotive decisions could implicitly concern equitable access to transportation and environmental benefits, but no evidence of this framing in available text.
FW Ratio: 75%
Observable Facts
Page displays primary image with alt text 'Honda logo,' supporting screen reader access.
No registration, payment, or demographic filter required to access article.
Author bio describes Tim De Chant without reference to protected characteristics.
Inferences
Structural commitment to semantic accessibility supports non-discriminatory access to information.
Article authored by identifiable journalist (Tim De Chant) with disclosed institutional affiliations and expertise. Content classified as 'Analysis' and 'Exclusive,' indicating editorial differentiation of opinion/advocacy from straight reporting. However, article content itself not provided for evaluation of ideological or political advocacy claims.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Author fully identified: 'Tim De Chant, senior climate reporter at TechCrunch.'
Author biography includes institutional affiliations (MIT lecturer, Knight Fellow, UC Berkeley PhD) and contact email.
Page implements user behavior tracking without visible disclosure of impact on editorial independence.
Inferences
Author attribution and editorial labeling support transparency in expression ownership.
Behavioral tracking infrastructure creates asymmetric information environment where editorial staff and publishers monitor readers without equivalent reader transparency.
Article implicitly engages with education through provision of analysis and expert commentary on automotive industry trends. Author's extensive credentials (PhD, MIT lecturer, journalism awards) reflect commitment to educational discourse. However, no explicit education access advocacy visible in available text.
FW Ratio: 75%
Observable Facts
Author holds position as MIT lecturer, indicating educational institutional engagement.
Article tagged 'Analysis' and 'Exclusive,' framing content as educational commentary on industry trends.
Page structured for accessibility and discoverability, supporting educational knowledge distribution.
Inferences
Author's academic affiliation and expertise suggest orientation toward educational discourse.
Content addresses corporate decision affecting competitive market landscape and consumer choice. Does not explicitly engage with concepts of human dignity, equality, or universal rights. Article operates within market analysis framework rather than rights-based analysis.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Article content not provided; evaluation based on headline, metadata, and schema markup only.
Headline frames Honda decision as competitive failure rather than rights impact.
Inferences
Article's market-focused framing suggests limited engagement with Article 1's human dignity principle.
Article addresses corporate decision affecting automotive market and implicitly consumer choice in vehicle purchases. Does not explicitly discuss freedom of movement or residency rights. Content framing suggests market limitations on choice, but not rights-based analysis of mobility freedom.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Article accessible without geographic gatekeeping or regional restriction.
Schema markup uses standard web protocols enabling global distribution.
Inferences
Universal accessibility supports informed decision-making about transportation options relevant to freedom of movement.
Article by identifiable author with institutional credentials suggests participation in professional journalism community. Content tagged 'Analysis' and 'Exclusive' indicates editorial positioning within journalistic norms. No evidence of forced association or content censorship visible. However, full article text not provided for assessment of editorial independence or pressure.
Article content does not explicitly engage with social security, labor rights, or welfare provision. Implicit connection to worker welfare through climate and automotive industry analysis, but no rights-based framing evident in available text.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Article addresses automotive industry decisions with potential employment implications, but framing appears market-focused rather than welfare-focused.
Inferences
Market analysis framing suggests limited engagement with Article 22 welfare rights principles.
Article content does not explicitly address privacy. However, evaluation of corporate decision regarding data-driven vehicles and market surveillance could implicitly engage privacy concerns. Available text does not discuss consumer privacy impacts of Honda's EV discontinuation.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Page initializes Google Tag Manager with ID GTM-M24PKK8.
JavaScript code captures UTM parameters and advertising platform identifiers (gclid, fbclid, msclkid) into sessionStorage.
Cloudflare Turnstile bot verification system deployed, storing verification status in localStorage.
Custom tenupDataLayer object captures 16 tracking attributes including 'data-event,' 'data-ctaText,' 'data-module,' 'data-brand,' and marketing identifiers.
No visible cookie consent banner or privacy policy link in provided page content.
dataLayer.push() sends tracking data to Google analytics infrastructure.
Inferences
Extensive tracking infrastructure without visible consent mechanism suggests unilateral data collection prioritizing commercial surveillance over user privacy protection.
Storage of advertising identifiers (gclid, fbclid, msclkid) across page visits enables cross-platform behavioral tracking without disclosed user control.
Absence of privacy disclosure mechanism in provided content indicates structural disregard for Article 12 transparency requirements.
Site infrastructure depends on third-party compliance (Google, Cloudflare). Turnstile bot detection and tracking systems do not directly restrict right to life, but surveillance infrastructure raises indirect concerns about privacy and personal autonomy protections.
Page implements Cloudflare Turnstile bot detection and Google Tag Manager tracking with datalayer capturing UTM parameters and ad network identifiers (gclid, fbclid, msclkid). No explicit privacy policy link visible in provided content. Session storage captures marketing attribution data.
Terms of Service
—
Terms of service not visible in provided page content.
Identity & Mission
Mission
+0.15
Article 19 Article 20
TechCrunch's organizational schema identifies it as 'Startup and Technology News' publisher. Content categories include 'Climate' and 'Transportation,' indicating editorial engagement with environmental and sustainability topics. Author (Tim De Chant) identified as 'senior climate reporter' with relevant credentials.
Editorial Code
+0.05
Article 19
Article tagged 'Analysis' and 'Exclusive,' suggesting editorial standards for distinction between news and opinion. Author biography provided with institutional affiliations (MIT lecturer, Knight Fellowship, PhD). No explicit editorial standards document observed on-domain.
Ownership
—
TechCrunch organizational ownership structure not evident from provided page content.
Access & Distribution
Access Model
0.00
No paywall, subscription requirement, or access restriction evident in provided page structure. Content appears openly accessible.
Ad/Tracking
-0.15
Article 12 Article 19
Extensive tracking infrastructure present: Google Tag Manager (GTM-M24PKK8), sessionStorage parameter capture, custom tenupDataLayer with tracking attributes. No visible disclosure of tracking practices or user consent mechanism in provided content.
Accessibility
+0.10
Article 2 Article 25
Page uses semantic HTML structure with NewsArticle schema and breadcrumb navigation. Alt text provided for primary image ('Honda logo'). Heading hierarchy and speakable specification present. No explicit accessibility statement observed.
Site provides open publishing platform for article with author attribution, institutional credibility markers, and categorical metadata enabling discoverability. No apparent editorial censorship or content removal visible. Schema markup supports information distribution and aggregation. However, targeted behavioral tracking suggests structural orientation toward commercial metrics over journalistic independence.
Site structure provides equal access to article regardless of race, gender, national origin, or other protected characteristics. No visible discriminatory gatekeeping observed. Domain accessibility features (alt text, semantic HTML) support non-discriminatory access.
Site provides universal access to information without geographic restrictions visible. No paywall or regional blocking evident. Supports information access necessary for informed mobility decisions.
Site structure enables author identification and credentialing (bio, affiliation, email). No visible membership requirements or forced ideological alignment for access. However, employment relationship between author and TechCrunch implies organizational constraints on editorial freedom.
Domain structured as independent news organization with editorial standards. Semantic markup and author attribution present. Tracking infrastructure suggests operational orientation toward commercial metrics rather than user dignity protection.
Domain provides platform for expression and author identification. However, surveillance tracking infrastructure and undisclosed data collection may implicitly constrain freedom of thought by monitoring editorial consumption patterns without user consent.
Site structure supports public discourse participation (comments infrastructure, social sharing, author contact). However, surveillance tracking may indirectly chill political participation by monitoring engagement without user consent.
Site provides open access to health and welfare-related information without paywall or demographic restriction. Accessibility features (alt text, semantic HTML) support equitable information access. However, no explicit health, welfare, or sustainability policy evident.
Site provides open-access educational content through article distribution. No paywall, registration, or demographic gatekeeping restricts knowledge access. Schema markup enables educational content aggregation and discoverability.
Site structure provides universal access to content (no registration requirement visible). Author bio accessible. Limited structural commitment to dignity-centered discourse evident.
Site infrastructure depends on third-party compliance (Google, Cloudflare). Turnstile bot detection and tracking systems do not directly restrict right to life, but surveillance infrastructure raises indirect concerns about privacy and personal autonomy protections.
Domain collects user data (behavioral tracking, attribution identifiers, interaction fingerprints) without explicit disclosure of data ownership or user property rights in personal information. Surveillance infrastructure suggests corporate appropriation of user data without visible compensation or control mechanism.
Headline uses emotionally charged verb 'killing' and absolute phrase 'any chance of competing' suggesting inevitable failure rather than strategic choice.
causal oversimplification
Headline implies single causal chain (EV discontinuation → competitive failure) without acknowledging complexity of automotive market factors.