I am pretty sure you are regardless of the hack. If your Tesla hits someone your at fault not Tesla. Laws would have to change a lot for that not to be the case. In that world, do I even need car insurance or is volkswagen liable? If you're talking ethically, you have a point.
Actually if the $8.5 per hour subscription shifts the responsibility in accidents from the driver to Volkswagen, it becomes worth it. But I doubt it will do. I think you will still be responsible to take over very quickly despite not being focused on driving.
And we haven't even gotten onto the ethics of - in a bad situation - choosing whether to sacrifice the passenger or another road user.
Would you buy a car that throws you over a cliff to avoid ploughing through 20 kids running stupidly onto the road?
I mean, in theory the autonomous driving will be good enough to protect both. But a similar scenario will come up somewhere/sometime and what is the correct answer? What do you program the car to do?
Aside: Will walking into traffic become the next train surfing thrillseeking? (PS: Movie reference, Intacto.)
In practice, humans don't make these decisions and autonomous cars won't either. They'll default to brake and stay on the road, lacking other options, because it's the simplest option and doing aggressive dynamic things to try and prevent a bad outcome to outsiders is not really likely to have a better outcome.
I agree that at first autonomous cars won't do better. It is much easier to program within parameters like "stay in your lane". But in 100 years time I think they will have more options.
This is just stupid. An accident is an accident and that is all there is to it, there are no ethics involved in a malfunctioning piece of equipment.
People hate ethics because of stupid crap like this. Because people have a hammer (trolley problem) and every thing turns into a nail but the point of the trolley problem isn't that there are trolleys and victims. You are falling into the trap of trying to make a thought experiment as real as possible, which is completely useless in practice. Comments like this give ethics a bad image and turn it into a sad joke.
Here is a real ethical dilemma: Early adoption of autonomous vehicles will cause deadly accidents during the development phase but the deployment of autonomous vehicles will save lives over the long term.
Should we accelerate the development of autonomous vehicles and accept early deaths in exchange for saving more people by deploying life saving autonomous driving earlier?
Should we delay the development of autonomous vehicles by two decades to avoid early deaths while letting people drive themselves and suffer an increased accident rate for 20 years that will ultimately cost more lives than the development of autonomous vehicles?
Tesla is following the first option. They are deploying technology that isn't ready to speed up the rate of progress.
Waymo is following the second option. Stay safe during development, even if it takes much longer for your product to actually decrease the fatality rate.
I am not an ethicist expert. As many people are not in a great many things. But it doesn't mean I don't care.
My point is that there is more to an accident. And hell, there very much is ethics involved in a piece of malfunctioning equipment. Ask any air crash investigator.
No one blames a human, when faced with making millisecond decisions, for not doing much. We're simply not very capable in tiny timeframes.
But will people accept the same standard for a crafted program (through whatever means) who's very promise relies on constant vigilance and sub-millisecond decisions? And what are the decisions to be?
I like your wider perspective take too. "Move fast, break things" vs "Stay safe" is a development timeframe vs cost trade off.