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United States Transportation

Lawmakers Want To Move Fast On Self-Driving Car Legislation (axios.com) 108

An anonymous reader shares a report: Members of Congress said Tuesday that they hope to move forward with a package of self-driving car legislation by the end of July. "We've got to keep moving, because again, this technology is moving away from us, you might say," said Republican Bob Latta, who is helping to lead the effort. That would move the bills out of the relevant committee -- but not out of the House entirely.
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Lawmakers Want To Move Fast On Self-Driving Car Legislation

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  • by Tanman ( 90298 ) on Tuesday June 27, 2017 @07:24PM (#54701873)

    Those words . . . they are terrifying.

    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      That's just because there's a steaming pile of feces on their desktops that they don't like the smell of, don't understand the application and don't care that they are actually making laws that effect the way new technology gets to be developed and implemented (and they're too scared to ask their 12 year old daughter what it means).

    • Well they need to get somethings in place well before the mid term elections to ensure the "donations" are made into the election fund.
      • ding.

        (A) holds a legislative influence over company or persons (B) that reside in district or region (C)
        (A) is elected by the people of district or region (D)
        (A) faces opposition in (D) but not in (C)

        Isn't this the ideal recipe for assured corruption? (B) must solicit (A) but anybody that opposes (A) must solicit (B)

        What is happening right now *is* the argument against broad federal powers.
      • Maybe I'm crediting them too much with an understanding of economics, but the fact of the matter is you don't want the technology to move faster than the legal framework allowing said technology.

        When tech is new, it's risky and expensive. Adopting new technology is a strategic shift, and that means businesses do it at different paces. Early adopters, late adopters, slower roll-outs, faster roll-outs. You get in early, you get ahead of the competition; you get in later, you get more-mature technology at

  • we've got a bunch of donations from companies and their owners who work on self driving cars. They want us to indemnify them legally.
  • Welcome this whole thing. Way too many distracted, ego-driven, or just plain stupid drivers on the road. Driving a sporty vehicle on a challenging road can be a lot of fun, but that decribes about 0% of my driving, and besides, it's damn dangerous for any other vehicles or critters on the same road. Let's face it, do your race driver imitation in a video game, and leave real world transportation to a very conservative computer program.

    • If you feel it is too risky to drive with these drivers, then don't. I choose to drive knowing the risks. The day there are imperfect autonomous cars on the road, I no longer know the risks.
      • by nasch ( 598556 )

        How do you know the risk any better with imperfect human drivers?

        • Because human drivers are predictable. You watch for the person hopping lanes in your rear view mirror and prepare to let them pass as safely as possible. Automated cars will do unpredictable things for some time, things like misunderstanding traffic markers and driving into construction zones, and it will be completely unpredictable.
          • by nasch ( 598556 )

            You must drive around different humans than I do, because they surprise me now and then.

            • Then you're not a very good driver.
              • by nasch ( 598556 )

                Impressive! You can tell how good a driver I am without even knowing anything about me. But I can predict the future; I knew you would say something snarky and condescending.

    • by epyT-R ( 613989 )

      A very conservative collection of programs (one could only hope) that will operate on a mesh network of millions of devices.. a fat target for terrorists and bored teenagers. Considering that half these companies pushing autonomous cars still can't secure their existing infrastructure (eg google, apple) made from much simpler devices..

  • Moving fast? Classic hail mary play for procrastinators...

  • in the US we don't have to worry about the Kangaroo Problem. [theregister.co.uk].

  • criminal liability??? they need to work that out as ford will not give a dam they want to cover up an fault with there hardware / software or even say you went to jiffy lube vs the dealer for an oil change so it's your fault. And do think for ford is going to shell out 20K-200K+ for your legal costs? or do you want to have your fate be up to the public defender?

  • Right to repair needs to be in there so you are not stuck paying dealer prices and free software updates for at least 5-10 years even if hdd / cpu upgrades are needed.

    • Reasoning?

      I'm not sure I want every person who thinks they know how to fix a car to be messing with cameras, sensors, and the main computer. Especially if there's going to then be some argument over who is liable for an accident when they don't put the computer back together correctly but insist they did according to the spec sheet.

      If the computer is able to perform self driving, why would upgrades be free unless it's a safety/bug in which case I agree it should be addressed just like any other critical saf

      • upgrades need to be free so they can't lock into on star + map updates at $20-$30 /mo or say well to keep useing the car you need to buy an $250 1TB HDD + install costs at the dealer as DB + map data does not fit on to the stock 500 GB hdd.

        You start with cameras, sensors and then move to non dealer tires and non dealer oil change at each 3000 miles.

      • Well, for one thing, dealerships tend to juice the hell out of people in their service departments. Even at the 'premium' brand.

        I had one dealership quote me $800+ dollars to fix something I did in my driveway in 5 minutes with the OEM $70 part. I don't know why they are charging $14,600 an hour for labor and diagnostic time, but clearly they were. This is an example of why I don't want to be locked into "stealership" service.

        Sure, if it's something major, or some kind of code update that requires specif

  • Forgive me for being skeptical of a GOP dominated House that has scant respect for science and engineering and whose gut instinct to de-regulate foretell a national disaster on the scale of Grenfell Tower.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      In the end it will be insurance that decides the fate of automated vehicles at particular stages of development. Some background https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com.au]. With manufacturers possibly accepting full liability for their automated vehicles in an accident, expect to be attacked by a team of corporate lawyers (who will according to the laws of corrupt capitalism, make deals with your insurance company, to shift liability from them back to you, when the automotive manufacturers basically scams the system

  • E.G.

    The production and sales of autonomous and self-driving vehicles shall be permitted, and individual states may not regulate, tax, or require licensing for the production, distribution, or operation of vehicles on the basis of autonomous or self-driving capability, but autonomous self-driving cars may be required to digitally authenticate active up-to-date liability insurance for the manufacturer and owner and authorization of users by the property owner, and "fitness" according to insurer and manu

  • Trust me...congress is "moving quickly" to find out a way to TAX these things more. Safety is the FARTHEST thing from their minds.
  • It's better to be fast and hurry through things than to be thorough and fair!

    If it's anything like their drone regulations, you'll be lucky if you can still drive a normal car without a special extra permit by the time they're done.

There's no sense in being precise when you don't even know what you're talking about. -- John von Neumann

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