fix: ma question 1 ballot measure now cites ballotpedia instead of unrelated collisionweek appeal article; subaru/kia telematics disabling now cites rdn primary source; collisionweek moved to lawsuit claims where it belongs
fix: alliance v. healey filing now cites courtlistener docket (primary source) instead of collisionweek 2025 appeal article; collisionweek kept only for dismissal & appeal claims it actually covers
Line 147: Line 147:
=== Alliance for Automotive Innovation v. Healey ===
=== Alliance for Automotive Innovation v. Healey ===


The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the trade group representing most major automakers, filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (1:20-cv-12090) in November 2020, challenging the Question 1 telematics expansion.<ref name="collisionweek-appeal" /> The Alliance argued federal preemption under the Motor Vehicle Safety Act & the Clean Air Act, unconstitutional takings of intellectual property, & cybersecurity risks from open data platforms.
The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the trade group representing most major automakers, filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (1:20-cv-12090) on November 20, 2020, challenging the Question 1 telematics expansion.<ref name="courtlistener-healey">{{Cite web |url=https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/18666877/alliance-for-automotive-innovation-v-maura-healey/ |title=Alliance for Automotive Innovation v. Maura Healey, 1:20-cv-12090 |publisher=CourtListener |access-date=2026-04-04}}</ref> The Alliance argued federal preemption under the Motor Vehicle Safety Act & the Clean Air Act, unconstitutional takings of intellectual property, & cybersecurity risks from open data platforms.


Judge Denise Casper (who took over from Judge Douglas Woodlock) dismissed the Alliance's remaining claims on February 11, 2025.<ref name="collisionweek-appeal" /> NHTSA had initially expressed concern that the law's wireless data access requirements could create cybersecurity vulnerabilities.<ref name="securepairs" />
Judge Denise Casper (who took over from Judge Douglas Woodlock) dismissed the Alliance's remaining claims in February 2025.<ref name="collisionweek-appeal" /> NHTSA had initially expressed concern that the law's wireless data access requirements could create cybersecurity vulnerabilities.<ref name="securepairs" />


On March 14, 2025, the Alliance appealed to the First Circuit.<ref name="collisionweek-appeal" />
On March 14, 2025, the Alliance appealed to the First Circuit.<ref name="collisionweek-appeal" />