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by pj_mukh
960 days ago
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This is just..more paperwork, but sure, highly unlikely that these companies don't have this report built internally already. And like I said, there will be scenarios not covered by it, because we simply don't know what they are and can't think it up. But if we're doing this, lets also make human Drivers do this, and for real parity, make sure all human drivers are kitted out with all the same cameras and logging systems we ask of from autonomous car companies, auto submitted to the DMV. Then analyze all the reports on an annual basis to see if the human and/or autonomous agent should be allowed to continue to operate on the road. I think people forget that driving is not a right but a privilege, I agree that both humans and autonomous agents should earn this privilege. P.S: If the claim is that a one-time DMV driving test is enough, then that should be enough for autonomous cars as well (I'm not making that claim) |
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Human drivers are the status quo. Once you consistently show that self driving can do better there would be a point in discussing that.
The problem is that you can't because such technology simply does not exist. There is no perception technology that is reliable enough. There is no prediction technology that is reliable enough.
To me it is obvious that Cruise and Waymo (and their likes) simply cannot withstand any serious scrutiny.
> P.S: If the claim is that a one-time DMV driving test is enough, then that should be enough for autonomous cars as well (I'm not making that claim)
The DMV driving test is just one element. We also know how human develop and what skills they acquire and when.
We don't let them drive until they're 15-17 (depending on local laws) because they lack certain abilities earlier than that. For example, humans acquire object permanance at around 24 months.
The Cruise incident shows that Cruise vehicles lack object permanance. They should not be elegible even for a DMV appointment.