US Consumer Groups Warn 'Robot Car Bill' Threatens Safety (consumerreports.org) 139
"If you don't place a Capable Engineering crew to oversee a project that involves lives, you're asking for trouble," writes Slashdot reader Neuronwelder. Consumer Reports writes:
Congress is moving ahead with plans to let self-driving cars be tested on U.S. roads without having to comply with the same safety rules as regular vehicles... The House passed its version of the legislation earlier this month with little opposition. The Senate is expected to vote on its bill in the coming weeks... "Federal law shouldn't leave consumers as guinea pigs," said William Wallace, policy analyst for Consumers Union. "We were hopeful that this bill would include much stronger measures to protect consumers against known emerging safety risks. Unfortunately, in the bill's current form, it doesn't."
The legislation, which would take effect in 18 months, would allow the deployment of up to 50,000 self-driving vehicles per company in the first year of its application, rising to 100,000 vehicles annually by the third year, exempt from essential federal safety standards... Automakers might be able to go beyond the limits by getting exemptions for more than one model. The bill also creates a means to go beyond 100,000 cars for each company, by allowing automakers to petition the NHTSA after five years for more vehicles.
"The bill pre-empts any state safety standards," argues the group Consumer Watchdog, "but there are none yet in place at the national level."
The legislation, which would take effect in 18 months, would allow the deployment of up to 50,000 self-driving vehicles per company in the first year of its application, rising to 100,000 vehicles annually by the third year, exempt from essential federal safety standards... Automakers might be able to go beyond the limits by getting exemptions for more than one model. The bill also creates a means to go beyond 100,000 cars for each company, by allowing automakers to petition the NHTSA after five years for more vehicles.
"The bill pre-empts any state safety standards," argues the group Consumer Watchdog, "but there are none yet in place at the national level."
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Like those same drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians I see every day who don't obey traffic laws or have much common sense?
I'd say they are their own worst enemies.
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US Consumer Groups Warn 'Robot Car Bill' Threatens Safety
Wait 'til it hits my 5-tonne 'robot pedestrian'...
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Like those same drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians I see every day who don't obey traffic laws or have much common sense?
This is one of the biggest challenges with completely autonomous vehicles. In the real world, even if you play by the rules and act totally logically, you can't safely assume that everyone else will. A human driver will naturally learn to deal with this variability and adapt. Software doesn't do that unless its programmers make it.
It's also worth keeping in mind that there are many legitimate reasons that normal traffic rules might not be followed. Emergency vehicles might be travelling faster than a normal
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A human driver will naturally learn to deal with this variability and adapt.
Not well. There's around 80,000 pedestrians injured [dot.gov] in vehicle crashes each year. We as a society "adapt" with things like placing low speed limits, well defined crosswalks and a multitude of signals and signage in places with high pedestrian traffic. But our main method to adapt is to simply ignore how poorly we adapt and instead adopt an illusion of our own superiority.
Software doesn't do that unless its programmers make it.
Every piece of self driving car software I've ever seen demoed already has many, many systems in place to monitor and attempt to avoid ped
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Every piece of self driving car software I've ever seen demoed already has many, many systems in place to monitor and attempt to avoid pedestrians and are much, much more sophisticated than human adaptability is.
Really? What have you seen demoed? I haven't seen a lot of detailed technical information (I'm a geek who follows this area out of interest, but it's not my field professionally) but what I have seen suggests that recent generations of these systems still rely on signals and markings far more than they will be able to in an entirely realistic and open world, and have frequently been forced to transfer control back to their human drivers when coming up against situations they didn't know how to handle, which
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In a fully automated system the driver doesn't exist so the owner would be unable to commit a tort except through negligence of maintenance. Any failing of operatio through normal use would be the same liability as a part failure for recall, meaning the liability for day to day use of a fictional vehicle should be on the manufacturing to provide it free from defects.
Owners will still need some limited liability for the maintenance case, but that ought to be a really, really, really low corner case.
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Why should the law with regard to automation differ from established law?
For the same reason that drivers are explicitly licensed in most places and what would normally otherwise be anyone's freedom to get into a vehicle and move around in it is curtailed until they have demonstrated their competence: we are literally talking about controlling dangerous machinery in life or death situations here, and just putting up with financial compensation for any damage after the fact isn't good enough.
I'd rather see this left to the courts to determine than having some arbitrary and irrational law based upon nothing but emotion and fear.
False dichotomy is false, but in any case, what useful compensation could a court possibl
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I know it's difficult on ./ to expect even the person writing the article summary to read the article, but here's what says:
Note the word "prove".
Also, the bill does:
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the same way that ciggarete compsniex provef that smoking wzs healthy?
The cigarette companies were successfully sued for $206 BILLION, which was the largest legal settlement in history, and much of that was justified by their intentionally misleading lies. So they are not very good examples of corporations that lied and "got away with it".
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the same way that ciggarete compsniex provef that smoking wzs healthy?
The cigarette companies were successfully sued for $206 BILLION, which was the largest legal settlement in history, and much of that was justified by their intentionally misleading lies. So they are not very good examples of corporations that lied and "got away with it" for other than the first 115 years causing (and still causing in other countries) untold millions of deaths, and massive pain and suffering of tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions more.
Just clarifying that for you. The $206 billion was also a settlement, not a suit, to eliminate any suits that might be brought by states that hadn't already trying to recover medical costs for all the people tobacco companies killed, crippled, maimed, sickened, and exploited in the name of free market capitalism, greed, and the almighty profit.
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China National Tobacco Corporation [wikipedia.org], AKA the Chinese government itself, is "the world's largest manufacturer of tobacco products".
Explain to me again how tobacco companies have some special tie to free market capitalism, when the largest one in the world is 100% government owned? When in the U.S. governments make almost as much as the tobacco companies do from selling cigarettes. When a safer (but not perfect) alternative in vaping is being blocked by the FDA [reason.com]?
Your story about "free market capitalism" doesn't
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You apparently missed the point. I'll attempt to make it more explicit for you.
You claimed "killed, crippled, maimed, sickened, and exploited in the name of free market capitalism, greed, and the almighty profit."
I merely pointed out that the largest group doing those actions isn't part of "free market capitalism" and that to blame greed and profits of the companies for it is a bit much when the government makes just as much off of it.
These two facts are inconsistent with your thesis that these actions are
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Going way off topic here but:
When a safer (but not perfect) alternative in vaping is being blocked by the FDA [reason.com]?
The funny thing is, if "under the terms of that law, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would have the authority to approve or deny any new tobacco products introduced after February 15, 2007" is essentially the whole of the law (barring the legalese) then it doesn't apply to 'electronic cigarettes', only to (some of) the liquids used in them, after all there's no tobacco and no nicotine in an 'e-cig', or in many of the liquids used in them. As long as at least one manufactu
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Every car that is currently sold is threat to those same groups - humans as drivers are absolutely the worst. Some worse than others,but none are perfect. I suspect that any technology that will be deployed would be, statistically, safer than human drivers.
You might suspect that, but is there any real evidence to show that we've reached anywhere near that stage of maturity yet? The only statistics I've seen so far suggest that autonomous vehicles even under relatively favourable and semi-controlled conditions still don't outperform good human drivers statistically, even with all their advantages in terms of never losing "concentration", having full 360 degree "vision" the whole time, having near-instant physical response to sensor inputs, and so on.
So deploying the technology when it has matured a little more has the immediate prospect of reducing overall death rate, however that doesn't help the individual.
There are
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You might suspect that, but is there any real evidence to show that we've reached anywhere near that stage of maturity yet? The only statistics I've seen so far suggest that autonomous vehicles even under relatively favourable and semi-controlled conditions still don't outperform good human drivers statistically, even with all their advantages in terms of never losing "concentration", having full 360 degree "vision" the whole time, having near-instant physical response to sensor inputs, and so on.
I don't think that anyone, certainly not me and not the manufactures are claiming that the technology is ready yet. Proving negligence in a wreck with the current technology and claiming damages would be easy. The technology is maturing rapidly, my guess is five years before we start to see serious test cars without human controls. We have to solve the ethical quandary before then.
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It would be nice to think you're right, though I fear your suggested timescales are optimistic.
What worries me is that a lot of the talk from the auto and tech industry execs does seem to be pitching this as a technology that's ready to go on real roads for real world testing in the very near future. Maybe that's partly for the investors, the media and the politicians, but still, I've detected more than a hint of arrogance in some of those public statements in recent years.
In reality, what I see today is th
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We can argue timeframe but it is, to me, inevitable that autonomous cars will become better drivers than humans. I think sooner rather than later, but, assuming civilization survives intact, 100 years from now the technology requirements will be trivial, so somewhere in th
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I think we're probably in agreement on most of this. In particular, I agree that levels 2-3 are the trouble spot. I suppose my immediate concern is that exactly the safety issue you mention, if a driver suddenly has to take charge, will be the cause of some high profile accidents, and that will then cause the kind of paranoia you mention later on and result in delaying the move to properly autonomous transportation. Right now I don't see much evidence that anyone has anything as high as level 4 ready to go,
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This road trial thing is really suss. What company could afford to turn public roads into an automation laboratory, civil suits worth millions on a mass scale. I'll bet you start to see a bunch of $2 companies that can easily borrow hundreds of millions to dollars rent the stuff they need and when lots of accidents occur, it goes belly up overnight and all the assets transfer to another $2 company, rinse and repeat.
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How come my 12 year old Lexus had auto-levelling head lights and windshield wiper sensors but still most economy vehicles don't have these features?
Because these are not safety features*, they are 'bragging rights', hence they have not been legally mandated, unlike seat belts and air bags.
As an aside, and I'm sure it's just me, whenever I read about windshield wiper sensors I have to wonder at the sheer laziness implicit in a technology that does away with the need to reach out with a single finger, with no additional need to move your hand, in order to move a lever approximately 1 cm. I idly wonder what other wiping functions we can replace next...
*OK
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We will only see wide adoption of the technologies if almost all of the worst drivers can afford it. That isn't going to happen any time soon.
Why not? The sensors and actuators add very little to the cost of a car. The software has a marginal cost of zero. Once you factor in insurance, SDCs will likely be cheaper than conventional cars.
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This this this!. I saw an ad for a kia something that was 9918 + TTL on TV. I've heard one of the less expensive lidar systems is 8K. The top line velodyne is 80K. So exactly how does one build the rest of a car for 1918 bucks? The valley seems to think everyone is buying a 100K car and they just are not. Worse, if the nirvana is achieved (driverless cars that are not owned by anyone except transit companies) then theoretically the number of cars produced drops to maybe 1/3 of current production so volumes
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Ugg the caveman: I have discovered how to make fire.
fluffernutter: Fire dangerous, you maybe burn down village. Me ban making fire.
Defective cars (and other products) have killed people before, that's standard liability law and it's not going to change and all the traffic laws still apply too. The regulation they're exempted from sets requirements to divide responsibility between the car and the driver, which doesn't really make much sense when they're one and the same. Everybody in the car are passengers,
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Like most things reduced to a quick paragraph summary or soundbite, the details are missing. The "exemption" isn't a blanket "if your car is self-driving, it can break all the rules" exemption. Instead, it allows the manufacturer to apply for permission to not meet a given safety rule, they must demonstrate that they are at least as safe as the rule requires. This exemption process already exists, but the bills will modify it so that it explicitly applies to the development of autonomous vehicles.
As an exam
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Re:Liability (Score:4, Insightful)
[Rumsfled] But it's a known unknown.
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I don't have a problem with this. (Score:2)
So long that the companies of the self driving cars are wholly liable for any and all injuries, deaths, and emotional distress to the tune of $10 million plus.
Doubt the law actually places liability on the companies testing these and we're just expected to take the deaths as the inevitable cost of progress!
Re:I don't have a problem with this. (Score:5, Insightful)
You need legislation to prevent that kind of liability, and it will save many, many lives. It just won't save everyone.
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50,000 people a year die on American roads, yet people still use them.
Everyone that has ever died was an habitual breather, yet people still keep on breathing - the fools. :-)
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A couple of hundred years ago, infant mortality was around 40% and maternal mortality around 10%. Getting pregnant was literally fatal 10% of the time. Yet most women still did it. I guess they were satisfied with the risk . What fools people are for developing medical technology to reduce that risk. And now all the foolish doctors have taken on malpractice liability for nothing.
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And if you think every step along the way in medical advances for birth did no further harm, you are sadly ignorant of medicine and history.
http://mentalfloss.com/article/50513/historical-horror-childbirth
Doctors wanted little to do with women'
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50,000 people a year die on American roads, yet people still use them. Imagine that! They must be happy with the risk they incur by using American roads.
People die breathing pollution as well, yet people still breath. Imagine that! America is not the Netherlands. You can't just give up your car and go about your life, and technically most people in the Netherlands can't do that either.
People still use them because they have to regardless of the risks, not because they are happy or accepting about them.
Re:I don't have a problem with this. (Score:4, Interesting)
You need legislation to prevent that kind of liability, and it will save many, many lives. It just won't save everyone.
No you don't. You just need insurance and actuaries to calculate and charge for the risks--which is exactly how we handle car accident deaths already.
Nothing new is needed to deal with self-driving car liabilities. It's a solved problem. I will never understand why people cling to this idea that it's not.
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You need insurance as the owner of the car.
No different than a business owner needs insurance on their company cars, even if they're not driving it.
THIS IS NOT NEW.
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You are inventing a problem where none exists. While you're whinging about "should" and "should not" the rest of us will be over here in reality.
Reality: It doesn't matter who "pays" the liability because the owner of the car pays it anyway. The cost is passed on. Since the system we have already does this, why change it?
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You need legislation to prevent that kind of liability, and it will save many, many lives. It just won't save everyone.
No you don't. You just need insurance and actuaries to calculate and charge for the risks--which is exactly how we handle car accident deaths already.
The difference is that if one person kills somebody in a car crash, we use phrases like accident, treat each incident individually and insurance is based around actual damages.
When one programming mistake or design decision kills 50 people we use phrases like tragedy, negligence, blame, the previously diffused anger is focused on a single company, possibly a single individual. Insurance starts including punitive damages, companies are targeted rather than individuals which historically leads to massive a
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Firstly you'll have to prove that self-driving cars would reduce road fatalities.So far I haven't seen any evidence that robocars are better than humans at driving, and I doubt I will in my lifetime.
Secondly you're asking for the self-driving cars manufacturers to get a break that no other industry gets. Airline safety is far better than it was fifty years ago, but if you tried to use that to lobby for a reduction in manufacturer's liability they'd look at you as if your head is on fire.
Just be
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Yes, and it’s an ever ongoing problem, how to balance the power of corporations with the power of individuals and with the power of majority opinions.
I think a significant percentage of people want self driving cars.
Really? (Score:1)
Proof positive - as if further proof were needed - that the Republican party have their collective tongue so far up the backside of big business that they now don't care who knows. A 1+ ton of metal - carrying fuel to intensify any resulting explosion, lest we forget - allowed to use the same roads as J Random Driver without even a basic roadworthiness test? The only other logical explanation is that they're all high.
A little more detail (Score:1)
What safety standards?
Why do they think those standards shouldn't apply?
They call this reporting?
Lies, damn lies, but no statistics. (Score:2)
Make clear that federal requirements necessary for human operation, like steering wheels, won’t be required for self-driving cars
That seems normal. Where's the beef?
Aperture Science (Score:1)
The world has always been just one big Aperture Science.
No safety standards yet (Score:2)
Of course there are none yet. Congress is kicking the can to the administrative agencies to figure out how to review submissions to determine if the vehicles are at least as safe as cars are now. Whether the federal agency will succeed in carrying out its mission, it will be in a better position to figure that out than congressmen are. It sounds like the "watchdogs" are asking for the self-driving vehicle equivalent of the Clipper chip: something that will be an antique before it is even passed, and then wi
Prempting state safety standards is fine.... (Score:2)
Our Government (Score:2)
Does whatever their corporate masters decide.
My first thought... (Score:2)
>> 'Robot Car Bill' Threatens Safety
Is this Bill Gates? Who is this Bill person and why hasn't he already been arrested?
Culture of 100% safety holds back progress (Score:2)
You want self driving cars? (Score:2)
You're going to need laws like this. Because it's just not going to be possible to make self-driving cars under a regulatory system designed for human-driven cars. Or indeed under any "mature" regulatory system (that is, one that has managed to fix the industry in question in place). It would be like taking today's regulatory system and insisting Ford follow it for his first Model A.
Personally, I'm not a fan of self-driving cars, so by all means oppose this law.
I DO NOT care. And nor should anyone. (Score:1)
TENS OF THOUSANDS of people die in car accidents every year in the United States.
Look, like the rest of you, I'm arrogant enough to think myself a great driver. But the numbers are irrefutable, we fucking suck as a species, at driving. Humans have FAILED.
Given the length of development thus far, if every car was immediately switched out for a self driving car, there is no way they'd match even a substantive fraction of the number of deaths.
ANY delay will cost MORE lives than those being saved. It's absol
No mention of what rules they aren't following (Score:4, Insightful)
Trying to understand this complex problem (Score:1)
Not much of a braveheart is he? (Score:2)
It makes sense. (Score:2)
Until then, regs for human directed cars are more likely to get in the way of development than they are to do any good.
Good to see some people aren't dumb (Score:2)
Is anybody really surprised by this? (Score:1)
Too incomplete... (Score:1)
The cited article didn't differentiate between self driving vehicles designed for human beings and self driving vehicles designed for freight only. I think it makes a difference. Who needs air bags and passenger roll bars if there are no living passengers?
Self driving cars lacking the safety requirements of a steering wheel, brake pedal, emergency brake, etc. might be acceptable for a car that can't be moved under manual control. But, it will be a while before I would trust a vehicle with no way to ta