so far we have been lucky the accidents have only impacted the driver. is it going to take the first accident where an autopilot car kills another innocent driver before people see the problem?
When autopilot kills more innocent drivers than other drivers you can point me to a problem. Time will tell if it is better or worse and the track record up until May/June was going pretty well.
I'd rather 10 innocent people die to freak autopilot incidents than 1,000 innocent people die because people in general are terrible at operating a 2,000-3,500lb death machine. Especially because everyone thinks of themselves as a good driver. It's fairly obvious not everyone is a good driver - and that there are more bad drivers than good.
Maybe I only see things that way because there have been four deaths in my family due to unaware drivers which could have easily been avoided by self-driving vehicles. All of them happened during the daytime, at speeds slower than 40mph, and with direct line of sight. Something sensors would have detected and braked to avoid.
Assuming we stick with the same conditions as in this case, I'd call an innocent life taken due to a driver disregarding all warnings from his system negligence. That also fits with what this driver was ticketed with which was reckless endangerment. We don't even get heads up display warnings about not driving into oncoming traffic, but nobody is going to blame a dumb-car for the actions of its driver. I would say that inaction in this hypothetical case would be the driver's crime.
I'd rather 10 innocent people die to freak autopilot incidents than 1,000 innocent people die because people in general are terrible at operating a 2,000-3,500lb death machine. Especially because everyone thinks of themselves as a good driver. It's fairly obvious not everyone is a good driver - and that there are more bad drivers than good.
Maybe I only see things that way because there have been four deaths in my family due to unaware drivers which could have easily been avoided by self-driving vehicles. All of them happened during the daytime, at speeds slower than 40mph, and with direct line of sight. Something sensors would have detected and braked to avoid.