The vast majority of cars have CANbus systems, which was just about universal by 2000. CANbus communication systems are badly understood systems that are blamed for everything.
An example is the LED lights that are said to be "CANbus compatible" when they have a resistor in parallel so that they take some current at low voltage. Those resistors will be detected by some blown bulb detection systems, which otherwise say that the bulb is blown because the car is expecting an incandescent bulb. That has nothing to do with the CANbus, which may or may not connect electronic modules on a car, but won't connect directly to a bulb.
Any car that has a incandescent reversing lamps can have a reversing sensor put in parallel with the reversing lamp. The lamp will take about 2 A and the 100 mA or less that reversing sensors take won't make any difference. The worst case is that if the reversing light blows, some cars will shut of the light that isn't taking current, so that would make the reversing sensor stop if the bulb blows.