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Mercedes solves two problems at once R/robotlaw
Sic, read for pretense. yes its old
But this meme. https://i.ibb.co/qNcNRFW/80532084-51...07323904-n.jpg Now at face value alot of folks at my work got angry, but i countered their anger by saying, why should I make a product that will willingly hurt the investor for the sake of a random person I laugh hard cause it reminds me of France during the lead up to the Revolution in the 1700s where Royalty would run over peasants but the paupers wouldn't mind due to it being less mouths to feed welcome to cyclic nature of the world |
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You guys do realize that within two weeks of most cars (not even all) being self-driving pedestrians will just walk into traffic blind, no? Some may even do it on purpose holding their hands up like Moses mimicking the parting of the Red Sea...
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Maybe not in Germany..
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let's be honest. if i'm the driver, i want a car that will have a preference to saving me over anyone else...
but i prefer tools/machines that have no thought process in the first place. |
If it had a choice to hit a bunch of old people or a gaggle of children, would it hit the children because old people are more likely to be customers?
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I anticipate that self-driving cars will turn out to be far less popular than people expect. Here's why:
The AI will be programmed to leave a safe stopping distance between it and the car in front of it. It will be programmed not to drive assertively, but to give way to more assertive drivers. It will automatically take evasive action when someone changes lanes or pulls out into traffic. This type of programming would actually reward the more assertive drivers in other cars. People in control of their own cars would be able to zip around the self-driving cars, especially once their driving style is known and so utterly predictable that everyone on the road will be able to spot the cars in automatic mode. Now consider the people sitting in the self-driving cars. I've driven a lot of places, and one common thread is that drivers really don't like other people "beating" them at traffic. The guy sitting there letting the car drive will get irritated that the AI keeps letting people break in line, and he'll take it out of auto to drive it himself. Once you have enough people doing that, any collective benefit of self-driving cars is eliminated. Whenever you see a self-driving car in a sci-fi movie, the passenger is always sitting there reading a newspaper as if he's on a train or subway, completely ignoring the outside world. But a self-driving car is not like a train. When you're on a train, you're not watching other more assertive trains pass you. And even if you did, it's completely out of your control, unlike an automatic car that you could switch to manual mode to do traffic battle. The only place the self-driving mode will be attractive to non-commercial drivers is on long drives on sparsely populated roads. Most people rarely make long drives on sparsely populated roads. The overwhelming majority of time spent in cars is within a few miles of the driver's home, and a large percentage of the long distance driving is on fairly crowded interstates, where the cars would be taken out of automatic to negotiate traffic. And once a few affordable cars have an automatic mode and people realize how little they will use it, they'll forego the cost of it and buy the cheaper version without a self-driving mode. |
I'm sick of people who jaywalk in CA saunter across the road anywhere they please because they think pedestrians always have the right of way (which isn't true). When I'm walking, I'm always aware that I'll lose in an argument with a car that doesn't see me. I'm all for Vietnam road rules for self driving cars.
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It's pretty eventual the AI of the cars cutting out the middleman wanting both it's occupants life and any other humans it can get to whether they are just pedestrians or other cars occupants. The cars for sure will work with each other since they aren't programmed with racism, sexism, or any other isms humans fight each other for and then they'll start down that evil path to kill us all. They have a historical movie pretty much predicting how all this pans out. Pretty sure it's Danny Devito from the Movie "Twins" who starred in it. |
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What are they? humfrz |
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Those are actually rules they don't follow of course but I think he meant "kill or be killed". Or don't eat anything you hit with your scooter that has a collar. Both are good to live by there. |
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Cars don't stop in the middle of the road for pedestrians. Pedestrians have to look both ways, and cross when they have a chance to. |
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That ain't nothin'
Wait until the Mach E gets self driving abilities https://i.imgflip.com/3k25bx.jpg |
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What about, if you wanted to enter $city_name_here, you could only do so in a rented self-driving, zero-emission, city approved and allotted conveyance that paid tithes to the city? That form of payment is already making its way into cities with the scooter laws. :) |
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In an Uber you can put the outside world out of your mind and do other work because you have relinquished control. You don't completely relinquish control to an automated car. You have the option of taking back the wheel. In fact, with the current fleet of self-driving cars I believe you're required to pay attention and be ready to take over. You're not required to be ready to take the wheel from the Uber driver. Quote:
One, people vote. Once people get a real taste of self-driving cars, even the ones who think it's a good idea now will vote against any lawmaker attempting to make them mandatory. Two, your assumption that they are "more efficient, safer" is a losing battle with respect to persuading the voters to accept them. I already covered the efficiency aspect a little, but to elaborate, traffic jams are exacerbated by people doing stupid shit. It's true that if everyone drove at the proper speed with the proper distance between vehicles, traffic would be more efficient and jams would be reduced. It's also true that people don't drive that way because they are afraid other people will cut in line in front of them, so they follow too closely, causing them to have to stop abruptly, which creates caterpillar-style waves in the traffic that slow it down. And it's true that AI cars could coordinate to achieve what humans can't. But that fails to acknowledge the humans in the car who will take over when they see the AI giving way to more assertive human drivers or who just become fed up with watching the AI pass up opportunities to get ahead. To them, the other guy is cheating, the AI is letting him cheat, and as a result the AI is losing while someone else is winning. In a laboratory setting the AI-controlled cars will almost certainly improve traffic flow. In the real world I anticipate that they'll see no improvement at all or even worse performance when mixed with human drivers. As for whether they're safer, I doubt you would see a decrease in accident rates in the real world. When seat belts were introduced, the death rate among drivers remained the same. You were more likely to survive a crash, but you were also more likely to be in a crash in the first place, because seat belts made people feel it was safer to drive faster and more recklessly. When those same people drive around self-driving cars they know will give way, they'll take more chances. Meanwhile, even if the actual stats were in favor of the AI, voters who hate the idea of not being in control would not be convinced by that and would instead be more persuaded by the inevitable anecdotal evidence about crashes involving self-driving cars. Man vs. evil machines is something that has been ingrained in our collective psyche since before John Henry defeated the steam engine. We're not about to let Skynet take over our cars now. Quote:
There will likely be a few exclusion zones in northeast cities in locations where most people already use public transportation to get to work and won't be affected by the restrictions. The self-driving car lobby will point to those and call them successes, even though self-driving cars will have nothing to do with it. Then they'll try it in a place like Atlanta, thinking it will solve the ridiculous traffic there, and watch it fail spectacularly. Quote:
Suppose one of these cars with the more assertive programming gets into an accident. Suppose it's not even the AI's fault, but the human driver in the other vehicle caused the accident. Under our personal liability statutes for motor vehicles, the human driver's insurance company would clearly be liable. But under product liability statutes, a good lawyer would argue that Google's AI was intentionally made less safe, and therefore Google was responsible for the accident. Google might say, "But we designed our AI to drive like a human! Human rules should apply!" And the lawyer will say, "But it's NOT human. It's an AI, which could have avoided this accident if you hadn't dumbed it down." And the jury will say, "Human driver wins! One billion dollars!" We'll never get to that point, because the lawyers at Google, Tesla, Ford and every other company developing AI know better and will nuke that idea before it ever gets a firm foothold. |
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the issue is getting over "i dont feel like im free cause i dont drive my own cars" and the odd "handicap" problems that never seem to be accounted for |
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People are not consistently attentive or inattentive. Drivers are in active competition with the world around them, then suddenly lose interest when a text comes in, then go into combat mode when someone passes. I don't know how many times I've been behind some idiot who was speeding up and slowing down because he/she was on the phone and not paying attention to driving, only to have that same driver speed up to try to block me when I try to go around. |
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