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"This is a predictive tool I've used: There are goals we've sought for ten thousand years, and we'll go on seeking them. Instant transport and travel, immortality (or at least longevity and miracle cures.), instant learning …" 
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	  When patrolman Porter chased a big rig trailer truck down the Arizona highway, he had more advanced technology than mere flashing lights and sirens to stop suspect vehicles.  
Sometimes, however, the bad guys are a step ahead. 
 Note that Keith Laumer used a similar idea - the police control-override - in his earlier 1965 novel A Plague of Demons.
While fictional police chases make for enjoyable movie footage, real-life chases can be dangerous for police officers and the public. A recent study showed that from 1994 through 2002, there were 2,654 crashes involving 3,965 vehicles and 3,146 fatalities during police pursuits. About sixty-five percent of those killed were in the fleeing vehicle and thirty percent were occupants of vehicles not involved in the pursuit. Forty police officers and more than one hundred pedestrians also died. The study used data from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System and the Crashworthiness Data System of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
 
Note: The missing chapter mentioned in the interview excerpt below has now been made available on Greg Bear's website: see Chapter 5 from Quantico.
 
In an interview with Technovelgy.com, Greg Bear had this to say about Cop Block:
 
Greg Bear: "I think Onstar kind of does that, doesn't it? [No, it doesn't - ed. But it will in 2008 - Onstar Locator] When officers put out these "lure cars" to catch thieves the cars will lock their doors and shut their engines off on command. Cop Block is kind of a general version of that. The society I'm speculating on ten years from now has gone through a lot of trauma and it really is giving up some of its freedoms for more efficient law enforcement. I don't know if this is really something we can see being allowed but it's certainly something that is doable. You see the car, and you see the serial number on the car, and the cop can scan the serial number and they can shut down your engine."
 
T: It seems to be doable. But then the next novel you write with Cop Block in it will need to have someone who successfully hacks Cop Block and who drives through town stopping everyone else's car.
 
GB:: "In my novel, my main character has basically done that. He has rewired the RFID tag in his truck. Actually, I think this chapter will be republished because it has been cut from the printed version of the novel." 
 
T: This is something that is not in the book?
 
GB: "This is part of a longer chapter on the patrol officer who is tracking the truck. It's about a 3,000 word description of the technology he has on his car and his attitudes towards patrol. The patrol officers are where it all begins; all investigations follow based on their work." 
 
T: But this was removed from the book.
 
GB:"It was removed because of length  - I'll be putting it on the website." [now available- ed.]
 
T: That's not the excerpt currently (04/12/2007) on the site? You're going to put this "unpublished chapter up later?
 
GB: "That's right."
 
T: I don't know if I can count that as "published technovelgy" for the site... I hate having to make these determinations. [Laughs]
 
GB: [Laughs] "Well, maybe you can annotate it."
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