By BERNARD CONDON NEW YORK (AP) — Your car is spying on you. That is one takeaway from the fast, detailed data that Tesla collected on the driver of one of its Cybertrucks that exploded in Las Vegas earlier this week. Privacy data experts say the deep dive by Elon Musk’s company was impressive, but also shines a spotlight on a difficult question as vehicles become less like cars and more like computers on wheels. Related Articles National News | What to know about the Meta glasses the New Orleans attacker used to scout the French Quarter National News | Tech giant PayPal accused of fraud over Honey online-shopping coupon finder National News | Jimmy Carter had little use for the presidents club but formed a friendship for the ages with Ford National News | Fewer than 1 in 1,000 US adolescents receive gender-affirming medications, researchers find National News | Nippon, US Steel file suit against Biden administration, union, and rival after $15B deal scuttled Is your car company violating your privacy rights? “You might want law enforcement to have the data to crack down on criminals, but can anyone have access to it?” said Jodi Daniels, CEO of privacy consulting firm Red Clover Advisors.