Skip to main content

How tech is helping used car sales with safe transaction zones

Safe Transaction Zones | Woman takes a photo of her car in preparation to sell it.
Blinker

Buying or selling a vehicle (or just about anything else) online can be intimidating. Who wants to meet up with potentially sketchy characters at your home, or go to the other person’s home? No one. You don’t have to look too hard to read real-life horror stories of people who showed up for a transaction and were robbed – or worse. There was even an episode of the TV show “Criminal Minds” about a guy who murdered people on test drives. Honestly, the vintage Datsun 240Z was the best part of that episode.

Safe Transaction Zones

To address the problem of bad guys among the ever-growing number of transactions that start online and end in person, cities and businesses are working to establish monitored meeting places for people to conduct transactions.

Automobile transactions present numerous special challenges that don’t apply when you’re selling a guitar or a laptop.

For example, California’s Orange County Register reports the police departments of Buena Park and Irvine have established reserved parking spaces, covered by cameras, at their respective headquarters. This idea is gaining traction around the country, with many other police departments and city governments implementing similar safe meeting places for online-based transactions.

Technology is playing its part in making Internet transactions safer, too. The website www.safedeal.zone lists dozens of known safe transaction locations across the United States, and adds new locations as they become known.

Safe Deal Zone
Washington Township Police Department

“As safe transaction zones are starting to pop up all over the country we thought it would be a good idea to create a way to collect and list available locations,” the Safe Deal Zone website explains. Safe Deal Zone provides only the locations, however. You have to find the car to buy on your own.

But what about cars?

Automobile transactions present numerous special challenges that don’t apply when you’re selling a guitar or a laptop. It starts with the test drive. Do you give the person the key, let them go alone, and risk car theft, or do you ride along and risk making the evening news in a bad way?

Blinker, a car selling app, performs an exhaustive fraud check on every vehicle sold on the platform and includes a free Carfax for all listings.

Then there’s arranging the pre-purchase inspection, handling a large amount of cash or a risky cashier’s check, handing over the title with your address on it, and finally handing over the car while it’s still registered to you. More than one seller has had a tense visit from the cops months later because the buyer never changed the registration and used the car to commit a crime.

Serial auto dealership entrepreneur Rod Buscher thinks he has a pretty good solution to all that, so he created a car sales app called Blinker. The app launched in 2016 and Blinker says its platform has facilitated over $45 million in transactions to date. The Blinker app was even nominated for a Webby award for best use of mobile camera. Buscher’s company currently holds 13 patents for the photo technology it uses to show cars for sale.

“Blinker provides an end-to-end solution, allowing anyone to sell their car, buy a car with financing, or refinance a car all on their own,” the company stated. “Blinker verifies the identity of every buyer and seller, as well as ownership records of each vehicle.”

Blinker

The app performs ID work on the buyer and seller. It also handles the money transfer with encrypted banking information and more.

“Blinker performs an exhaustive fraud check on every vehicle sold on the platform and includes a free Carfax for all listed cars,” the company points out. Though Blinker currently operates in California, Colorado, Texas, and Florida, it plans to expand nationwide as soon as possible.

A new business opportunity

Here’s the most interesting part: Blinker has also teamed up with Big O Tires to offer authorized safe test-drive sites at 36 Denver locations. This is an idea that could revolutionize safe transaction zones and give a boost to businesses that get on board. Buyers and sellers can see a list of participating safe transaction zones on the Blinker app before agreeing to meet.

“After seeing police stations creating [safe deal zones] across the U.S., we had the idea of establishing … safe locations for vehicle test drives.”

“The Blinker team has watched the trends and industry closely and understood that many consumers are uneasy about in-person exchanges, even when meeting during the daytime in public places,” Blinker’s PR staff told Digital Trends. “In the last several years, there’s been a trend of thefts and injuries during these transactions regardless of the time of day.”

The partnership between Blinker and Big O Tires is currently limited to the Denver area, but the idea is so simple and beneficial that it’s likely to spring up elsewhere. The benefit for a participating business is that it can offer quick pre-purchase inspections on the cars bought and sold at their safe location.

Big O Tires

“After seeing police stations creating e-commerce exchange zones across the U.S., we had the idea of establishing the same designated safe locations for vehicle test drives,” said Andrew Price, Chief Marketing Officer for Blinker. “Plus, since we leave the inspection process up to our customers, buyers can conveniently get vehicle inspections at Big O Tires locations, too.”

The idea is genius for buyers and sellers who want a safe place to do business and for participating businesses. No one wants to buy a car with bald tires and hear the seller try to say there’s nothing they could do about it while standing in front of a tire store.

Jeff Zurschmeide
Jeff Zurschmeide is a freelance writer from Portland, Oregon. Jeff covers new cars, motor sports, and technical topics for a…
The Kia EV3 could be the cheap electric SUV we’ve been waiting for
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV9 was already one of the cheapest ways to get an electric SUV, but now the company is taking things to the next level. After teasing the Kia EV3 last year, the car is now official.

The EV3 is built to be a slightly smaller, cheaper version of the EV9 -- following the path of the Rivian R2, which arrived after the Rivian R1S. It's certainly not as technologically advanced as the EV9, but it still looks unmistakably like a modern Kia, and is clearly a sibling of the larger SUV. On the outside, the vehicle has the same split taillights and very similar Tiger Face front. But it is quite a bit smaller. The vehicle will be available in nine finishes -- however only "Aventurine Green" and "Terracotta" are being announced right now.

Read more
Kia EV3: release date, performance, range, and more
White Kia EV3

Kia is on a roll. Hot on the heels of the success of the Kia EV6 and EV9, the company is already announcing what could be its cheapest electric vehicle yet -- the Kia EV3.

The Kia EV line seems to follow the rule of lower numbers indicating a lower price — and if so, the EV3 will end up being the cheapest electric car Kia has released to date. That, however, thankfully doesn’t mean that the EV3 will be a low-end car — it just means that Kia may be pushing the boundaries on electric car pricing.

Read more
Kia EV3 vs Tesla Model Y: Can Kia’s new entry-level car take on Tesla?
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV3 is finally coming, and it could well end up being the best small-size electric SUV to buy when it finally rolls out. It's smaller than the Kia EV9, but it offers many of the same design elements and features. But there's another small-size electric car that's currently one of the most popular vehicles out there -- the Tesla Model Y.

How does the Kia EV3 compare with the Tesla Model Y? And is one vehicle actually better than the other? We put the Kia EV3 and the Tesla Model Y head-to-head to find out.
Design
The design of the Kia EV3 is very different than that of the Model Y, though they're both reasonably good-looking vehicles.

Read more