Now, a go-kart, designed for 5- to 9-year-olds, has some of the same rudimentary “nanny” features that my dear mother would have clamored for when I seized freedom and jumped behind the wheel on my own.

The “Arrow Smart-Kart” from California-based Actev Motors is WiFi-enabled and, via an app, allows parents to set maximum speeds (though the go-kart tops out at 12 mph), geographic boundaries and to remotely stop the vehicle in its tracks.

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The kart also has front-end collision avoidance technology, so children who don't use the brakes won’t ram themselves into the garage door. Want one? That’ll be $999.95, please.

Some of the kart’s safety capabilities are the same ones that big automakers are adding to their vehicles as value add-ons.

Ford in 2010 introduced “MyKey,” which gave parents speed, volume and seat belt controls. Chevy put a “Teen Driver” mode on its 2016 Malibus, which keeps teens from disabling certain features like traction control and park assist.

Hyundai and Mercedes-Benz have similar systems. There are car parental control apps that give parents report cards on teens’ driving behavior.

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Nearly every major carmaker has models with collision avoidance systems, but not all of them come standard.

So the $22,000 Volkswagen Passat that does this:

A go-kart can do that as well. Go figure.

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“Every day we see dozens of Google self-driving cars that go by our windows here,” Actev chief executive Dave Bell said over the phone from company headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. “There’s a lot of technology being developed there, but it’s not affordable yet. What we’re talking about is some of those same features, but starting from a completely different view point. Some of it is similar to cars, and we can do that.

“Being able to connect to a smartphone and the cloud, that’s something that’s really impressive, frankly, in this price range.”

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Actev, launched in February, has backers in high places. It’s co-founder is Tony Fadell, who once led Apple’s iPod division and also founded Nest Labs, creator of the smart thermostat.

It’s a Silicon Valley tech start-up -- for kids. Bell said the company sees potential in gaming-based platforms. Think about an app that tracks lap times or laser tag (yes, LASER TAG) on go-karts.