Like teflon coated rubber timing belt - you should not own a car anymore.
You CAN still own a car but just not a modern one that has planned obsolescence built into it. Examples of planned obsolescence are:
1. "Wet" rubber timing belt.
2. Plastic water pump housing.
3. Plastic thermostat housing.
4. Water pump placed inside crankcase.
5. Coated cylinders that can't be rebored.
6. Electronically controlled thermostat.
7. Plastic oil pans.
8. Sealed for life transmissions.
9. Automatic transmissions with dry dual clutches.
Basically if the car comes with a 100k mile warranty, it's designed to have a major failure (engine or transmission) at 101-120k miles so the owner can foot the repair bill. By then the car will probably be about 10 years old and it'll be mechanically totaled because the repair cost will exceed the value of the car.
This is why more people prefer to lease cars for up to 5 years and then trade them back in for another new model so they're not stuck with a car that's heavily deprecated with the prospect of big repair bills just around the corner.
The end result is that fewer cars will last much beyond 10 years and they'll be thrown away like old computers and smartphones. Not many cars produced today will still be around in 20 years.