News0 min ago
Why Would Driverless Cars Need Rules For Crashing?
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/te chnolog y-37418 119
we are continually being told they are perfect.
we are continually being told they are perfect.
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I'm only asking a question and, if you'll bear with me, trying to make a point. It's obvious that your certainty that there was nothing there was changed by an automated function and you, quite rightly, investigated. By doing so, you've proven that the machine saw something you didn't. In this case it was a harmless plant but, had you not had the sensors and it hadn't just been a plant, your certainty may have caused you to collide with something.
Automated cars will 'see' things which we can't, no matter how certain we are that there is no hazard.
Automated cars will 'see' things which we can't, no matter how certain we are that there is no hazard.
// Gromit, then they’re not failsafe. Pointless. //
Nothing is failsafe. But if it is an improvement, then it is worth doing. We already know that human drivers have a terrible record at controlling cars. If a computer driven car improves on the human then it is not pointless.
If it turns out they are no better than the humans then it won't be widely adopted. But if deaths, injuries and crash rates are reduced, then it will. At the moment we are just evaluating them. We should not reject them outright before we know if they will be an improvement or not.
Nothing is failsafe. But if it is an improvement, then it is worth doing. We already know that human drivers have a terrible record at controlling cars. If a computer driven car improves on the human then it is not pointless.
If it turns out they are no better than the humans then it won't be widely adopted. But if deaths, injuries and crash rates are reduced, then it will. At the moment we are just evaluating them. We should not reject them outright before we know if they will be an improvement or not.
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