Cecilia Abadie made history in a way she didn't expect Tuesday night —
when a California Highway Patrol officer gave her the world's first
known ticket for wearing Google Glass while driving.
Abadie is a project manager at Full Swing Golf in San Diego, and an enthusiastic Glass Explorer. She told her story, and posted the ticket in question, on Google+.
The first violation on the ticket is driving in excess of 65 mph —
not an uncommon violation in California. But the second violation reads
“Driving with monitor visible to driver (Google Glass)."
To make that part of the ticket stick, however, the officer in
question will have to prove that Abadie had the screen active at the
time. She says it wasn't.
California Vehicle Code section 27602 says you can't drive if a video
screen "is operating and the monitor, screen, or display is visible to
the driver while driving the motor vehicle." There are exceptions for
GPS and other navigation devices. (If you keep your iPhone open to
Google Maps and attached to the dashboard while driving like I do, rest
easy.)
Should drivers be ticketed for wearing Google Glass even if the
screen is off or in GPS mode? Share your thoughts in the comments.
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