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by hndamien 3007 days ago
I think the standards are different in this case. While the pedestrian definitely should not have been where they were, and if this were an incident with a human driver, you would probably say the driver was not at fault, I think this is slightly different.

They are on the road with conditions because what they are doing is somewhat experimental still. There is a safety driver for a reason that did not respond. A human driver may have collided but would have responded and potentially avoided a fatality (if not a collision). The benefits of autonomous driving completely failed on all counts in this case, which imply that being on a public road is far to early for Uber - suggesting some fault to lie with Uber or the regulators.