Amazon Web Services and BlackBerry have created a joint data platform that could guide auto makers and third-party developers in personalizing and improving cloud-connected vehicles.
Amazon Web Services, or AWS, and BlackBerry said in a statement that they were creating a scalable, cloud-connected software platform, coined BlackBerry Ivy, to address challenges with automotive data access, collection and management. Ivy's development will take place under a multiyear global agreement.
The intelligent vehicle data platform "will allow auto makers to provide a consistent and secure way to read vehicle sensor data, normalize it, and create actionable insights from that data both locally in the vehicle and in the cloud," the companies said.
BlackBerry Ivy will apply machine learning to data produced by vehicle sensors and other vehicle hardware and software to generate predictive insights.
The companies said this will enable "auto makers to offer in-vehicle experiences that are highly personalized and able to take action based on those insights."
For example, Ivy could use data to recognize driver behavior in hazardous conditions, recommend to drivers that they use relevant vehicle safety features, and then provide auto makers with feedback on the use of those features.
Auto makers that receive real-time performance data from Ivy could discover potentially faulty components, identify affected vehicles and notify drivers. They could then perform targeted recalls.
Amazon Web Services and BlackBerry said auto makers will "be able to deliver new features, functionality and performance" as well as establish new revenue opportunities based on the data.
"Data and connectivity are opening new avenues for innovation in the automotive industry," BlackBerry CEO John Chen said in the statement, "and BlackBerry and AWS share a common vision to provide auto makers and developers with better insights so that they can deliver new services to consumers."
The platform expands upon the existing automotive partnership between the two tech giants.
They teamed up at CES in Las Vegas last January to create a connected-vehicle software platform concept combining BlackBerry's QNX operating system with Amazon's cloud services to aid in connected and autonomous vehicle development. Ivy is not based on QNX.