House Passes Bill To Speed Deployment of Self-driving Cars (go.com) 176
The House voted Wednesday to speed the introduction of self-driving cars by giving the federal government authority to exempt automakers from safety standards not applicable to the technology, and to permit deployment of up to 100,000 of the vehicles annually over the next several years. From a report: The bill was passed by a voice vote. State and local officials have said it usurps their authority by giving to the federal government sole authority to regulate the vehicles' design and performance. States would still decide whether to permit self-driving cars on their roads. Automakers have complained that a patchwork of laws states have passed in recent years would hamper deployment of the vehicles, which they see as the future of the industry. Self-driving cars are forecast to dramatically lower traffic fatalities once they are on roads in significant numbers, among other benefits. Early estimates indicate there were more than 40,000 traffic fatalities last year. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says 94 percent of crashes involve human error.
exempt automakers from safety standards??? (Score:3)
To what level????
I want see some CEO hulled in front of small town hard ass judge after a bad crash where they get into the local jail after they try to pull the NDA / EULA / 3rd party BS to get out of talking about the code. In a very bad car accident it can be an criminal trial.
Re:exempt automakers from safety standards??? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is an inevitability, once statistics catch up with it, that a self driving car will be the cause of a major accident. I doubt that this can ever be a criminal trial, because no criminal intent is involved at any level of the design or implementation of the self driving car. It's an accident.
As more self driving car accidents occur, the self driving cars will get better and better at avoiding them (unlike puny humans). If for no other reason than the designers will make improvements based on all of the data from each accident.
In court, the lawyers can argue about how the self driving car came to the decision to run over a group of people whose skin color it did not like. There won't be any NDAs. The owner of the technology will file a motion to keep the technology under seal. It will be discussed in court, but in a closed courtroom, with court members bound to secrecy about the technology. This is nothing new.
BTW, I'm all for requiring safety standards of automakers. (OMG! regulation!) As long as you can quantify it in a way that is clear in the law. You can't have laws that are so vague that you can unintentionally violate them. There needs to be a bright line.
The line cannot be that no accidents can occur -- because self driving cars are already safer than cars driven by puny humans.
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self driving cars are already safer than cars driven by puny humans.
I don't think you can really say that road conditions vary day to day and by region, I doubt the self driving car has been tested in all those varied conditions.
I could tell you some anecdotes about drivers from Southern Texas and other places that don't get much if any snow driving on snow for the first time or I could tell you about the places where cellular and gps don't work or bridges that have wind gusts that catch even a seasoned driver off guard. Most of the self driving cars I hear about being test
Re:exempt automakers from safety standards??? (Score:4, Interesting)
You can't have laws that are so vague that you can unintentionally violate them.
No, but you can certainly have punishments so weak that manufacturers will find it worth it to intentionally violate them. You know, like bypassing security in order to be first to market. Not that we've ever seen that shit happen before...(cough, IoT, cough)
The line cannot be that no accidents can occur -- because self driving cars are already safer than cars driven by puny humans.
Let's see how the masses feel when they find out a loved one was one of 100,000 people killed after a DDoS-style mass attack against autonomous vehicles takes place in a major city. Watch as the manufacturer demands closed-door legal proceedings and produces redacted shit detailing their fault, negotiating death caused by an insecure product down to a free cup of fucking coffee for the next of kin.
If companies are already looking to push this technology by requesting a pass on current regulation, then it will probably go to market like damn near every other mass-produced thing we make, meaning shit for security. And I've already explained why they will do this; because it will be worth it.
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Replace every instance of "self-driving car" you just wrote with "plane" and you have the same argument. Except it hasn't happened.
"Planes" are one of the more regulated activities, and yet there are still aircraft "accidents" that occur due to aircraft failures, and aircraft accidents that do not happen despite aircraft failures simply because there was a human aboard to manage the situation.
There is a reason there are a dozen or so ways to disable the autopilot on an aircraft and that several of them are tested before each and every flight. It isn't because of how reliable and safe autopilots have turned out to be over the years.
We
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Replace every instance of "self-driving car" you just wrote with "plane" and you have the same argument. Except it hasn't happened.
Every commercial airliner is equipped with autopilot. You still will not see one leave the ground without a trained and certified human pilot. There's a reason for that.
The move for autonomous cars is looking to eliminate the human driver altogether. We're even questioning the need for training or licensing human drivers in the future.
And from a regulatory standpoint, they aren't even fucking close, so lets stop trying to compare apples and oranges.
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The line cannot be that no accidents can occur -- because self driving cars are already safer than cars driven by puny humans.
This is the point that I hope gets understood sooner rather than later. Accidents happen currently to the tune of ~3000 people dying a month and many times that injured. If self driving cars reduce this then progress has been made. The data I've seen is that self driving / driver assist reduces car accidents by ~20% and injuries by ~25%. That's huge. As long as some jackass lawyer doesn't get to have punitive damages that are in excess of what a regular driver would get then it should be fine. Meaning
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I doubt that this can ever be a criminal trial, because no criminal intent is involved at any level of the design or implementation of the self driving car. It's an accident.
The two highest levels of culpability, purposely or knowingly probably not. The two lowest levels, recklessness and negligence can most certainly happen. The former would be where the court finds that there was a programming decision made to ignore a potentially dangerous condition, the latter if it failed to recognize the condition or
civil case can be stoped by eula's and nda's not (Score:2)
civil case can be stopped by eula's and nda's not so much in an criminal prosecution.
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If a self-driving car crashes into me, it really doesn't matter if the owner of the SDC has agreed to a EULA, as long as I haven't..
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The line cannot be that no accidents can occur -- because self driving cars are already safer than cars driven by puny humans.
And what's your evidence for this rather bold assertion?
I have no doubt that self-driving cars *can* be safer than human-driven cars, but I'm quite dubious that they are there already. I'm even less certain that the current state of partially self-driving cars is safer than purely human-driven cars in the long run.
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I think what we're going to find is that when cars don't have to deal with fussy/loud children, not getting enough sleep, being too drunk/high, thinking about their ex breaking up with them last week, getting/not getting that raise/promotion etc etc and it can just concentrate on driving.... that self driving cars are already way, way more safe than slow meat-based human drivers. And they'll only continue to improve. Yes, there will be the inevitable fatality where the automated car kills a human, but worki
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The automated cars are so wary of me as a pedestrian that they stop a full 20-30 feet away even before I leave the curb.
This is a certain recipe for gridlock in many places, such as college towns. Any vehicle that stops for you before you leave the curb will find itself sitting stock still in any situation where there is anyone on the sidewalk, whether they intend to cross or not.
Note that the law (at least in Oregon) does not require anyone to stop for a pedestrian before they leave the curb, and thus every AV that follows your "stop" rule will be a traffic hazard to every human-operated vehicle that does not expect sudden
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Good thing you got the parenthesis in.
As if it were just luck, and I didn't understand that the laws differ from place to place. Sheesh.
Over here, you are required to stop at a pedestrian crossing if there are people close to it.
What an amazingly stupid law. Someone walking past a crosswalk forces cars to stop as if they were going to cross.
There are examples of driving ed teachers needing to get out of the car to ask people to hang out somewhere not right next to a pedestrian crossing.
How dare he! I mean the driving instructor. Doesn't he know that pedestrians are the only concern? But then, it is an amazingly stupid law for just such a reason. I could force all traffic to a complete halt by just standing on the corner with no intention of crossing. While I can stand IN the cros
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Too bad technology can never, ever be improved once it has been created.
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Too bad technology can never, ever be improved once it has been created.
Three years into a 100,000 car/year introduction of AV and you will have a huge percentage of those vehicles that will be the same technology as they were when they drove off the dealer's lot. I know for a fact that the 2005 vehicle I use every day is the same 2005 technology, despite it being 2017 in this part of the world.
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Too bad they don't even try to improve it so that it's reasonable before it gets put on the market,
To quote someone else loosely: it is unconscionable that SDC technology is not already being adopted. There is no time for "reasonable" improvements or further study. Today is now.
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Mine hasn't failed to pick up something in front of it. I don't trust it for people cutting me off, as it doesn't have a wide enough field of view to react to anyone in the next lane. I'm not real impressed by the driving ability of someone who will merge into my lane right in front of me while going significantly slower, unless there's some sort of unusual condition, but it's not a use case I can simply ignore without consequences.
My lane following isn't smooth. I don't want to rely on it.
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Well until competent drivers are able to drive 100% of the time distraction free, we're going to have to look for alternatives.
Driving on 8 hours good sleep with a cup of coffee in you, and no passengers driving below the speed limit, sure humans are great, but the number of times that happens is a lot lower than most people would like to admit. Maybe you follow the rules, but do you trust everyone else to as well?
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Well until competent drivers are able to drive 100% of the time distraction free, we're going to have to look for alternatives.
Are you trying to claim that AV will be operating 100% percent of the time distraction free? "AV, change your destination ..." Dog runs into the road. Child runs into the road. Sun glint obscures the camera that watches for red lights/stop signs. Pot hole ahead! Person standing on the corner looking across the street, but chatting with the person next to them instead of crossing. Person walking BACKWARDS through a crosswalk (I've seen it.)
Distraction free? No, I don't think so.
Maybe you follow the rules, but do you trust everyone else to as well?
As another poster has comme
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I deal with these things daily, ride my bike in traffic with them daily, they're just cautiously driven cars. Maybe when you finally see and interact with one you will understand.
,that was me, I was facing with the direction of traffic, about 2' from the road at the crosswalk, then turned 180 degrees to face traffic. The car sensed that I was changing direction (lidar is amazing, can track rotation of objects) and towards the lane. By the time my right foot hit the ground (abou
In the case you state
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In the case you state ,that was me,
I didn't bother going back a couple of levels to figure out who said what. Doesn't matter.
I was facing with the direction of traffic, about 2' from the road at the crosswalk, then turned 180 degrees to face traffic.
So you weren't facing the street, you were facing against the flow of traffic. That's not an indication that you are intending to cross. It's an indication that you want to go back the way you came.
the car came to a stop, it had decided there was a good chance I was going to enter the crosswalk.
Unfortunately, the rules (as they exist in my state) say nothing about "a good chance" or a confusing description that has you facing parallel to the curb but somehow stepping towards it. You had not entered the crosswalk,
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The most important difference between a human and an automatic driver is that when the automated driver gets confused or blinded it will always do the same thing: pull over and stop as soon as it's safe to do so. Humans, unfortunately, are impatient creatures who tend to plow right ahead and hope there's nothing in front of them and hope they'll be able to regain their bearings in time.
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when the automated driver gets confused or blinded it will always do the same thing: pull over and stop as soon as it's safe to do so.
If it is confused or blinded, it by definition cannot know when it is safe to move, even if that is just to pull over and stop. Woopsies, it didn't see that bike rider passing him on the right and now someone is dead.
Claiming special status as to safety because it will make some "known operation" when it gets confused is not supporting the claim that AV will be magically safe.
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The better question is how are state right government republicans pushing a federal government regulations on what is normally a state level?
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They are trying to do things like exempt them from having to have mirrors, window washers, etc.
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Way to not read the whole sentence:
to exempt automakers from safety standards not applicable to the technology
Since "the technology" will require the ability of a human to take control of the vehicle and operate it safely when the AV fails or enters conditions that it is not designed to handle, then this means exempting automakers from existing safety standards such that it makes human operation of the vehicle less, if not completely, unsafe.
Re:exempt automakers from safety standards??? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd do it. It's safer than riding with my wife driving. Hell, it's safer than the majority of drivers. 34% have admitted to texting and driving and over half talking on a cell phone and driving. Then there are all the ones that should never have gotten a drivers license to start with. I was in Germany in the 80s and I was amazed at how many Americans failed the test to get a license to drive in Germany. I worked with ppl that took it 3 or 4 times before passing. My wife took it 3 times and gave up, she never drove at all in Europe.
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Great, let me get that coded up for you.... Let's see, I think I'll use C, agile development and run it on my old Pentium 90 I was going to toss into the recycling bin next week....
If you make it onto the expressway alive, I'm pretty sure something bad is going to happen.
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When I drive in Atlanta I'm wrapped in a 2.5 ton steel machine that is on a full steel frame. It's a 2003 Mercury Grand Marquis and in one accident a toyota splattered itself to pieces on the side of it and 1,000 dollars later my car was fine. I'm still afraid, not because of me but because of the idiots that change lanes without looking, talking on phones, texting and just flat out stoned. I'll settle for lack of control if it will solve the problem of all these idiots flying around not paying attention to
Re:exempt automakers from safety standards??? (Score:4, Insightful)
When I drive in Atlanta I'm wrapped in a 2.5 ton steel machine that is on a full steel frame. It's a 2003 Mercury Grand Marquis and in one accident a toyota splattered itself to pieces on the side of it and 1,000 dollars later my car was fine. I'm still afraid, not because of me
Well, you probably should be because you're clearly poor at making choices. The "splattering" you so deride is caused by things called "crumple zones". Those absorb the energy of the impact so that the car splatters, not you. That person's car going "splatter" likely saved *you* from serious injuries. You're basically gambling that most people have safer cars than you and that one of those unsafe car drivers won't be the one to hit you.
What's amazing is you clearly know how dangerous the roads are, yet knowingly drive a car that doesn't have good crash test ratings.
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Sounds like somebody hasn't been on public buses in the right cities.
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Not me...I don't generally even answer the phone for voice in the car, and do NOT text (read or write).
I do this because I like to drive FAST...and I know I need to pay attention to road conditions and traffic around me.
"94% of crashes involve human error" (Score:5, Insightful)
Then there are those accidents that are 'unavoidable' (debris falling on road say).
But become not-unavoidable if you have an AI with reflexes beyond a trained stunt/rally driver who has a week to prepare.
dealer only service with oil changes each 3000 mil (Score:2)
dealer only service with oil changes each 3000 miles will drive profits up.
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dealer only service with oil changes each 3000 miles will drive profits up.
So far most SDCs are electrics. There is no oil to change.
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Oil is a lubricant, not a fuel.
Yes, Virginia, even electrics need lubricated.
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No more oil changes with electric motors.
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I've heard the same, even longer periods for some cars. Lots of the old rules for cars are obsolete. I use the hard break-in technique for my vehicles. Used on 3 new vehicles no problems.
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What are you guys driving?
It's 20000 miles between oil changes on my current car. And the car tells me when that's coming up!
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electric vehicles will go mainstream long before self driving cars do.
Wow! That long? You know EV's are NOT going to be mainstream until fossil fuels become too expensive to use and THAT's not happening in my lifetime. All Hail Hydraulic FRACKING!
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it's still useful to test the hell out of automated cars to make sure we know what they do
No, that is not useful. Considering that 3000 people per day die worldwide in HDC accidents, any delay in the adoption of SDCs is unconscionable.
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Considering that 3000 people per day die worldwide in HDC accidents, any delay in the adoption of SDCs is unconscionable.
Self driving vehicles are such a first world problem. The vast majority of the world where those deaths occur feature unnavigable "roads" for a self driving vehicle.
I would far sooner trust a llama to get me up a Chilean mountain road, if only because the llama has a stake in the outcome.
Hot Wheels work best on little orange tracks.
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The vast majority of the world where those deaths occur feature unnavigable "roads" for a self driving vehicle.
The country with the most traffic fatalities is China, with about 260,000 deaths annually. China's road infrastructure in many areas is better/newer than America's.
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But automated cars are controlled by computers that make decisions in fractions of a second! They should absolutely be able to avoid debris falling on the road.
Let's test that hypothesis. You get your AV going down I5 at posted legal speed and I'll drop a rock on it from an overpass. I predict your AV will not avoid "debris falling on the road" when the laws of physics say your AV cannot stop in time to avoid hitting/being hit by it.
If they don't have the sensors for it, then that's a problem.
I have three significant chips in my windshield that came from small rocks being kicked up by trucks in front of me. I challenge you to have a camera with sufficient resolution, and computer with sufficient processing speed, to detect,
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Well we're talking about debris falling on the road sizable enough to cause an accident, not rock chips.
A common concept in aviation is that every accident begins as a sequence of events that aren't necessarily individually fatal. In this case, as I pointed out, that "rock chip" may be taking one of your sensors out of operation. That's the starting link in the chain.
They should absolutely be able to detect a kid on a bridge about to drop a rock.
"Hopeless optimism" is not a very good way to design safety systems. That you think an AV computer can detect a "kid on a bridge holding a rock" (when the kid may be on the downstream side of the bridge and completely hidden from the AV until he'
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What's so confusing about this [complaintsboard.com]?
"What's the problem, officer? I didn't make a mark on it. I drove right by."
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In most places the computers controlling the car have maps that already tell them the location of all the roadsigns to within a few millimeters. They'll stop because they haven't been told there isn't a stop sign there, and just use the cameras to look out for unexpected new stop signs for the few minutes from when they are put in until the map updates propagate.
If all cars are self-driving you don't need the signs at all, just a shared map annotated with traffic flow restrictions.
If all cars are guaranteed
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Welcome my son, welcome to the machine [youtube.com]
and go the under posted speed limit? (Score:2)
and go the under posted speed limit?
trying to 55 when others are doing 70-80+ is unsafe. Yet this what I-294 is out of side of peek times day to day.
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Here's some stats:
http://www.iihs.org/iihs/topic... [iihs.org]
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its interesting that during the last almost 30 years of driving, i am not one of those statistics, but i could be one in the future no fault of my own.
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you failed to mention the most obvious issue that any tech related site should mention...
the possibility that at 88mph... BSOD
Meh. (Score:2)
Automobile design and performance standards are pretty much set at the federal level anyway. A few states (California, for example) have stricter emissions standards. But it's time to put a stop to that B.S.
I can take practically any vehicle legally operable in one state and drive it across the border into another anyway. So state by state laws really don't accomplish much other than to protect local market channels.
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I can take practically any vehicle legally operable in one state and drive it across the border into another anyway
For a relatively brief period of time.
If the vehicle is going to remain in that new state, you'll have to register it in the new state. And it's at the registration step where the state's standards come into play.
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If you have multiple legal addresses, you can maintain legal residency in the state of your, more or less, choice. Car is registered at your home address, it's just visiting with you, when in the other state.
CA has fucked up car laws. I drove an out of state registered car for a few years when I first moved here. Now I just cheat on smog, but that's another thread.
CA is still better than some states. IIRC there are some where you can't put so much as a flowmaster on your car. Car asthma is required by
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If you have multiple legal addresses, you can maintain legal residency in the state of your, more or less, choice.
Nope. At least, not in many states. The car has to be registered where it is primarily used, not your legal residency.
CA has fucked up car laws. I drove an out of state registered car for a few years when I first moved here.
Same thing happens in all states. Fortunately by being in CA you were much less likely to have the locals turn to tickets as a primary revenue stream, so you got away with it.
And as someone who got to experience the joys of air in Los Angeles before CA emissions really clamped down, the "ha ha! I broke the law" angle is not exactly appealing. Might as well brag about eating rancid meat,
Remove the impediments (Score:2)
I guess a self-driving taxi and freight truck would go without driver airbags, driver steering wheel, and driver pedal, since the idea is to not pay a driver--you still have to pay a driver for lounging around in your car all day when he could be at home lounging around in front of the TV or digging in the garden.
As for "speed deployment", that's not quite it.
If we lose a few thousand or tens of thousands of jobs a month to new technologies, that's just business as usual: the .01% nudge in unemploymen
It won't be safer for long (Score:2)
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I have no doubt based on the behavior I see on the road every day in the large American metropolitan area I live and work in that once self driving cars become ubiquitous, somebody is going to figure out how to hack the AI to make it more aggressive. I see people all the time who take crazy chances on the road to get in front of other drivers. Human beings are really good at being jerks and ruining a good thing for everybody else by exploiting it first. So I expect somebody to figure out how to make the AI make the car its controlling go as fast as possible after a light goes green and do other perhaps risky behaviors under the assumption that the others cars will have AI that will let them. Once that happens, it probably will get very unsafe with large numbers of hacked cards jockeying for position all the time on the road under the assumption that the other guy will obey the rules so they don't have to.
Maybe. I see it largely going the other way where people care less about getting a few car lengths ahead because they are watching a movie or playing on their phone.
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Maybe. I see it largely going the other way where people care less about getting a few car lengths ahead because they are watching a movie or playing on their phone.
Nope. I watch movies and play on the phone now and I know it is much safer to do that when I am more car lengths ahead of someone else than following behind him.
People will hack the AI because it exists. Owners will do so because it will make their car cooler. Others will do it because it is a challenge and they can get their leet haxor creds by causing damage.
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... I know it is much safer to do that when I am more car lengths ahead of someone else than following behind him.
It's cute that you can simplify the problem down to you and one other car and pretend that the 'solution' holds for all other problems in the class.
People will hack the AI because it exists. Owners will do so because it will make their car cooler. Others will do it because it is a challenge and they can get their leet haxor creds by causing damage.
And that would pretty much settle the question of where to start looking to 'apportion blame' in the event of an accident.
(on the other hand I make no opinion on whether people should be allowed to tinker with the programming or firmware of their cars (it'll take all night...))
The odds favor people (Score:2)
When all cars are automated, all crashes will be 100% computer error.
Seems like people still have the statistical edge.
What is it Samuel Clemens never said about statistics?
Congress doing something right? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not only that, but imagine the economic consequences when the states finally do get their shit together [slashdot.org].
Re:Congress doing something right? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nice try, but already several states have emissions standards, and had the Feds used their unconstitutional "right" to pass a law only permitting Federal jurisdiction over emission standards, CA's rules (which like 10 other states follow) would NEVER have seen the light of day. And those standards have helped push electric vehicles, even self-driving cars (which arguably would not exist if alternative fuel cars wasn't as big of a market as it is - it's sparked innovation in a previously dead market).
In the end, the Feds don't really have authority to do this, if the States would finally stand up and remind the federal government of their rights under the 10th amendment. Great point: I may not be a leftie or rightie (I'm actually centrist), but how would you feel if the Feds also demanded concealed carry reciprocity nation-wide? Or blocked LGBT marriage nation-wide? Most liberals squirm, at best, at the thought, yet ITS THE SAME IDEA - the feds taking away the right for a State to determine its own laws entirely within that state. It's only when something is commerce cross-state boundaries that the feds should be doing anything like this, and several states (esp. out west) are larger than many European countries, so I have a hard time believing they are having a hard time doing business in California (practically its own country already).
Bad human decision making vs. AI Bugs (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm always curious when self-driving discussions appear. I'm "somewhat" informed on this topic, and am relatively neutral; but, I can't help but believe that tech folks are a bit too optimistic about the benefits of "eliminating human error." For example, I see in these types of discussions the example of debris on the road. Theoretically, most human drivers have the ability to see such debris and determine a course of action, and most of the time they choose correctly and avoid disaster.
On the other hand, it would only take a single bug in an AI "debris subroutine" running in a whole bunch of self-driving cars to choose the wrong course of action 100% of the time. Such a bug would *probably* only be identified after enough failures were accurately recorded to piece together a pattern that could point to it (i.e., an incomplete test plan didn't catch it, a code review didn't catch it, differences between virtual test worlds vs. the real world hid the defect, etc.).
I guess if someone could convince me that it is possible to write 100% bug-free code, I would feel better about this. However, what I perceive as the somewhat naive optimism of technical folks is somewhat terrifying in this context.
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On the other hand, it would only take a single bug in an AI "debris subroutine" running in a whole bunch of self-driving cars to choose the wrong course of action 100% of the time. Such a bug would *probably* only be identified after enough failures were accurately recorded to piece together a pattern that could point to it
What makes you say that? I would expect any SDC accident or near-accident where the car is potentially at fault to be given a thorough hearing, FAA style. I expect the "black box" in SDCs to give you all the raw sensor data from the last 30 seconds which will be put into simulators and ran not just on what did happen but a ton of variations to see what could happen. And for any change in the programming to be ran through a bunch of regression tests to check that you don't have any unexpected behavior change
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Car crashes should be caused by humans, like in the olden days. Humans. Far away. Possibly another continent. In the dark comfort of their mom's basement.
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No, but the ~90% reduction in auto-related fatalities will.
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That will make dying hurt less right? No, but the ~90% reduction in auto-related fatalities will.
Have advancements in computers caused a ~90% reduction in the number of bugs, debilitating hacks and successful attacks?
I rest my case. Removing human drivers will do little more than create a massive risk from autonomous solutions rushed to market, riddled with shit security. Deaths will occur, and manufacturers will get a slap on the wrist for causing it, just like they do with inferior solutions today.
From a psychological point of view, it's a lot easier for humans to accept when a human makes a deadly
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But advancements in mechanical technology, combined with standards, enforcement, liability etc. have led to a massive reduction in the number of random dangerous mechanical failures in correctly maintained vehicles.
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But advancements in mechanical technology, combined with standards, enforcement, liability etc. have led to a massive reduction in the number of random dangerous mechanical failures in correctly maintained vehicles.
30 years ago, you mainly had to worry about the adult-aged drunk on the road. Today, you have to worry about damn near every driver on the road, since 99.999% of them have a smartphone with them, and the majority of them like to distract themselves by using it behind the wheel. Oh, and did I forget to mention the added bonus of a pill-popping society of opiate addicts driving around? Can't forget to give credit to Big Pharma for that one.
Leave it to the masses to counteract all those technological advanc
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Since when? You're talking about a field that has seen explosive growth in just the last 20 years. If you've got a graph that says that hacks, etc. have ouptaced adoption of IT technology by several factors, great. Otherwise, this is a pointless argument.
riddled with shit security
That's better. But I doubt hackers are going to be responsible for more than a handful of deaths
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So we identify the human driver as the cause of 94% of accidents. This suggests that one way to make the roads safer is to replace the human---making the world better with technology. You respond to this with sarcasm and hostility? What kind of geek are you? Why are you even here?
Bear in mind that computers are the primary "driver" in a number of other vehicles. Guided missiles and spacecraft stand out, in particular.
Those earlier milestones were simpler because there are fewer variables. We essentially sol
Re:Stop Congress! (Score:2)
Whoa! STOP Congress!
FIFY
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Bluetooth. Bring your own game controller. No wheels or KB/mouse, that gives you an unfair advantage over other drivers.
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Study their habits. I bet they're easily bluffed.
I suggest painting playing children on your car. That will get the AI cars panic braking whenever you want their lane.
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The problem with the modern world is that most people form their beliefs from the experience of watching things happen in movies, instead of the experience of reality.