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Hacker George Hotz Unveils $999 Self-Driving Add-On (pcmag.com) 80

An anonymous reader quotes a report from PC Magazine: Hacker George Hotz is gearing up to launch his automotive AI start-up's first official product. In December, the 26-year-old -- known for infiltrating Apple's iPhone and Sony's PlayStation 3J -- moved on to bigger things: turning a 2016 Acura ILX into an autonomous vehicle. According to Bloomberg, Hotz outfitted the car with a laser-based radar (lidar) system, a camera, a 21.5-inch screen, a "tangle of electronics," and a joystick attached to a wooden board. Nine months later, the famed hacker this week unveiled the Comma One. As described by TechCrunch, the $999 add-on comes with a $24 monthly subscription fee for software that can pilot a car for miles without a driver touching the wheel, brake, or gas. But unlike systems currently under development by Google, Tesla, and nearly every major vehicle manufacturer, Comma.ai's "shippable" Comma One does not require users to buy a new car. "It's fully functional. It's about on par with Tesla Autopilot," Hotz said during this week's TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco.
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Hacker George Hotz Unveils $999 Self-Driving Add-On

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  • Uses onboard radar (Score:5, Informative)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @07:58PM (#52890115) Homepage Journal

    The price is possible because it is not a complete system; per TFA they are using (some might say leveraging) onboard radar. That means that unless your car already has a sufficiently useful radar (e.g. it has adaptive cruise control and/or automatic emergency braking) you're not going to be able to retrofit at least the first generation of this system without taking heroic steps.

    That's a shame, because it would be really nice to be able to put this into some of the vehicles made in the late nineties, after basic vehicle technology approached the current state of the art but before practically every car sprouted a remotely hackable infotainment system.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @08:16PM (#52890195)

      The list of supported cars is currently even more limited: https://commaai.blogspot.de/2016/09/comma-one-supported-cars.html

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @09:23PM (#52890495)

      No, it's not a shame because his system is very dangerous. He built it using reinforcement learning based off his personal driving patterns. Meaning he drove around in training mode and it watched what he did. Then in running mode it copies what he did in similar situations. So that means you can't count on it in any new or lesser seen situations. Any event that didn't occur often enough during training, like a bird flying infront of you, can cause unexpected behavior by the AI. This type of system is inherently unsafe unless you train it against everything. You need to train both what to do and what not to do.

      How often has he had someone swerve into his lean or cross in front of him? How many times did someone almost do that? Unless you specifically train for when that happens, this type of learning system could learn to see the natural drifts of people driving between the lines as a hard rule and then freak out when someone suddenly or slowly mergers in front of you. If most pedestrians it sees walk up to the edge of the road and then wait the car passes, it'll never learn to slow down for them because it never saw past that waiting point. Thus when someone does step into the street, you'll run them over before you realize the AI isn't going to stop for them.

      There was a research paper who's algorithm made a massive improvement in identifying cars from photographs. Well they thought it did until other people looked closer and figured out all the images with cars were taken later in the day and all the non-car pictures were taken earlier in the day. The AI was only checking the sky color and using that to determine if a car was in the picture or not. Excellent in the training result, horrible real-life performance. The way he trained his system allows this same type of issue to occur.

    • by bhv ( 178640 )

      I think the infotainment system is less relevant than the need for electronic driven controls like throttle, braking and steering. At the very least is should significantly reduce cost of implementation.

  • come on .. you know this thing is just being driven by some guy in India working in a call center :o)

  • At this point i'm almost convinced that it was a fake wiki edit because i've never been able to find any pictures anyone else have any better luck?

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @08:20PM (#52890217) Journal

    I got a '75 Monte Carlo that I've been restoring and I look forward to making it self-driving so I can send it to get me a fucking gelato, a fifth of Johnny Walker and a carton of Chesterfields.

    • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Seeing has how those old ass cars have a hard time going straight with a sober driver, I don't think making it self drive would be better...unless your a drunk with the car.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      ...and a carton of Chesterfields.

      How many living rooms do you have that you would need more than one Chesterfield?

  • Liability? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by xlsior ( 524145 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @08:25PM (#52890235)
    Does he indemnify the users in case his tech screws up and kills someone?

    Going cheap can get very, very, VERY expensive, very quickly.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Does he indemnify the users in case his tech screws up and kills someone?

      No because the driver is supposed to remain alert and watching the road and so remains responsible. Besides if it was going to end up spilling lots of blood they would have called it the period, not the comma.

      • No because the driver is supposed to remain alert and watching the road and so remains responsible.

        That is NOT how product liability [wikipedia.org] works. He would be liable for any reasonably foreseeable use of the product and even for negative outcomes he could not foresee. It may not matter at all if he warns the passenger to remain alert. Most likely any case would be held to the strict liability [wikipedia.org] standard which means intent to harm is irrelevant.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @08:27PM (#52890247)

    $999 for a homing missile they can load up with petrol and drive into a civic center.

    • by ELCouz ( 1338259 )
      +1 Insightful
    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Yep.

      Between this and drones, I'm just waiting for the inevitable.

      Even if they only run misdirection, you could make people petrified and get them banned overnight.

      The same way that because of something that happened 15 years ago, we still can't carry a can of Coke onto a plane.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      related xkcd [xkcd.com]

    • $999 for a homing missile they can load up with petrol and drive into a civic center.

      They could already have made a car radio controlled and driven it into a civic center, and they haven't done that yet. It's also not going to retrofit into cheap cars, so they have to steal a car and then get the self-driving system working. It's probably cheaper just to turn someone into a suicide bomber, especially while we're spending the money to bomb them into radicalization.

    • $999 for a homing missile they can load up with petrol and drive into a civic center.

      Uhhhh, as attacks have shown for quite a long time, terrorists have little issue with committing suicide in order to inflict harm.

      Removing the driver is hardly necessary.

    • folks have that now, and it's a lot cheaper than $999.
  • Hack (Score:2, Troll)

    by sexconker ( 1179573 )

    GeoHotz isn't a hacker, he's a hack. Stay far away.

  • I wonder if he's figured out he's going to need this? He can have people sign releases of liability and hold harmlesses till hell freezes over, it won't stop people from suing him.
  • Even if I wanted something like this - "Monthly fee" = "Piss Off"

  • I think he misspelled coma, as in what you will be in after using this system ;-)

  • Looks like I'm not going to be able to kill anyone with this. I have a manual transmission.
  • by m.alessandrini ( 1587467 ) on Thursday September 15, 2016 @02:30AM (#52891377)
    So it's not a self-driving car. But no surprise here, if Google and other megacorporations cannot do it yet, I doubt a boy in his basement can.
    • by nocloo ( 82496 )

      This boy in a basement have defeated plenty of security measures from large corps who have spent hundreds of millions to protect their technology. Ever heard of a bunch billionaires who started from their basement/garage ?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        It's much easier to find flaws with others stuff than to build something (even with flaws) yourself.

      • This boy in a basement have defeated plenty of security measures from large corps who have spent hundreds of millions to protect their technology. Ever heard of a bunch billionaires who started from their basement/garage ?

        And that qualifies him to design (ha!), develop and build a mission-critical life endangering system how? Please explain in great detail... how. (I work on mission-critical life endangering systems every day. I look forward to your explanation.)

        Also, those basement dwelling billionaires were not building 'high-speed rolling death on wheels.' They built payment-systems and office products. Kinda' big difference there.

  • Fuck you and your subscription software model!
  • As reported by TechCrunch; how appropriate.
  • really? whats next microtransactions at each intersection to perform the turns you need?
  • I respect geohotz, but I don't think a 26-year old kid completely grasps the ramifications of building and shipping a technology whose goal is arguably to "kill fewer people". Even if he does kill fewer people, people are going to die using this or any autonomous driving platform. Is he ready to deal with the fallout from that? Also, we won't know until millions or hundreds of millions of miles have been driven how the technology compares in terms of safety to human drivers. It sounds like he's using low-e

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