Remote Parking Assist
I’ve seen the You Tube video but do not have the option in ‘Settings’
Is it available only outside the U.S.? My salesman couldn’t get an answer.

I don't have the dash cam app even if many other European countries have it. Definitely not a legal issue within EU but some sort of a decision by the local MB importer.
The car manual also describes a "memory parking" feature but I did not find it from my car. Not sure if it would be able to park the car to my garage, perhaps not sufficient objects to identify the route but this I might use if it existed.




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The cost for the initial subscription is built-in to the price. The 3 years was a pretty good deal. Sad to see that they reduced it to 1 year, but I fully understand that at some point it's only fair to have to start paying for it, unless you buy a new car which again comes with an initial subscription. Otherwise how many years should they build into the price upfront? People who lease a new car every 3 years obviously don't wanna pay for more than three years on every car they lease.
At the end of the day, the operations costs have to be paid for. Whether you pay it upfront or on a monthly basis for as long as you use the services doesn't really matter. I think the latter is better, because then you only pay as long as you actually own the car or want the services. Somebody who always uses CarPlay or Android Auto for example doesn't wanna have to pay for these services, even if they are part of the initial purchase.
Last edited by superswiss; Jun 16, 2022 at 02:46 AM.
Speaking of costs most of these have an actual ongoing cost that is a tiny fraction of what they're charging. They were set up from the start, and by design, to cost little to operate realative to their income so as to generate massive profits. It's why every corporate scumbag is trying to create services in their product in any way. I own my own business and I understand the point of running one but I don't look for ways to steal money from my customers.
I don't excuse corporate scumbaggery for any reason, at any time, ever. This is corporate scumbaggery.




Speaking of costs most of these have an actual ongoing cost that is a tiny fraction of what they're charging. They were set up from the start, and by design, to cost little to operate realative to their income so as to generate massive profits. It's why every corporate scumbag is trying to create services in their product in any way. I own my own business and I understand the point of running one but I don't look for ways to steal money from my customers.
I don't excuse corporate scumbaggery for any reason, at any time, ever. This is corporate scumbaggery.
No you wouldn't implement these services w/o a back-end, but even then somebody still has to pay the cellular carrier for the data service to the car each month. For security reasons, you wouldn't want your car to be on the Internet with open ports and accept direct connections from other devices on the Internet. Instead you implement something like this using a push notification or messaging infrastructure that the cars connect into and listen for messages. Just like you don't want your home network to be exposed with open ports and accept incoming connections. Plenty of bots out there continously scanning the Internet looking for devices that accept connections on open ports as potential hacking targets. There also needs to be a level of safeguards to make sure that whoever is trying to remote start is actually the current owner, and a way for MB to remotely deauthorize past owners when they sell their cars. You wouldn't want the previous owner of your car still be able to remotely unlock it. Sure some of that could be handled by authorizing one's phone directly with the car and then the new owner would need to deauthorize previous phones, but it's just better if this can be done centrally.
You are not forced to renew any of these services. There's always Apple CarPlay and Android Auto which do many of these things if you are more comfortable with Google and other companies offer so-called free services and selling your data instead. Price is what you pay, value is what you get, so it's up to you to determine if the value is worth the price. As with everything there are market forces at play, too. Considering that Audi for example only builds in a 6 months initial subscription and then charges about double for their services of what MB is about to charge, I'm kinda siding with MB here. But again, you don't have to pay these prices. There are alternatives.
Last edited by superswiss; Jun 16, 2022 at 12:18 PM.
Don't buy the security angle either. If a data connection between my phone and an MB server can be made secure then a connection between my phone and the car can be also be made secure. I might add without the extra opportunity created by sending my data to MB and THEN having them send it to my car creating one more vulnerability that never needed to exist. Further I'm not much worried about getting hacked personally. Hasn't happened yet but large corps have had my data stolen more than a half dozen times. MB being in the loop gives me no piece of mind whatsoever; in fact how long was it since they were last hacked? Lol
Nor does having MB in the loop do anything to help security on a private sale where the two parties have to sort it out themselves. Meanwhile if it gets turned into a dealer they can reset any personal information in the car just the same with or without MB having ever been involved in the process.
I pay for my apps and many services without complaint so long as they aren't fake needs created to generate profit. And yes, going all the way back to the first of these fake services I encountered coming from Cadillac for OnStar they were positively giddy about the "highly profitable" service during the earnings calls. That was before the idea of charging for something like rear wheel steering which incurs no cost other than billing someone for nothing.
I think we're probably going to have to agree to disagree.
No you wouldn't implement these services w/o a back-end, but even then somebody still has to pay the cellular carrier for the data service to the car each month. For security reasons, you wouldn't want your car to be on the Internet with open ports and accept direct connections from other devices on the Internet. Instead you implement something like this using a push notification or messaging infrastructure that the cars connect into and listen for messages. Just like you don't want your home network to be exposed with open ports and accept incoming connections. Plenty of bots out there continously scanning the Internet looking for devices that accept connections on open ports as potential hacking targets. There also needs to be a level of safeguards to make sure that whoever is trying to remote start is actually the current owner, and a way for MB to remotely deauthorize past owners when they sell their cars. You wouldn't want the previous owner of your car still be able to remotely unlock it. Sure some of that could be handled by authorizing one's phone directly with the car and then the new owner would need to deauthorize previous phones, but it's just better if this can be done centrally.
You are not forced to renew any of these services. There's always Apple CarPlay and Android Auto which do many of these things if you are more comfortable with Google and other companies offer so-called free services and selling your data instead. Price is what you pay, value is what you get, so it's up to you to determine if the value is worth the price. As with everything there are market forces at play, too. Considering that Audi for example only builds in a 6 months initial subscription and then charges about double for their services of what MB is about to charge, I'm kinda siding with MB here. But again, you don't have to pay these prices. There are alternatives.




Oh, and just on the security front. We've already seen what's possible if cars can be directly accessed over the Internet. Jeep learned their lesson. Thankfully it was limited to a lab experiment. It's a lot harder to patch a software flaw in millions of cars already on the road vs. on their own servers.
https://www.wired.com/2015/07/hacker...-jeep-highway/
Last edited by superswiss; Jun 16, 2022 at 02:11 PM.







