Toyota Creating In-Vehicle Alcohol Detection System 507
srizah writes "Toyota is developing an Alcohol Detection System that can detect drunken drivers and would immobilize the car when it detects excessive alcohol consumption. From the article: 'Cars fitted with the detection system will not start if sweat sensors in the driving wheel detect high levels of alcohol in the driver's bloodstream, according to a report carried by the mass-circulation daily, Asahi Shimbun. The system could also kick in if the sensors detect abnormal steering, or if a special camera shows that the driver's pupils are not in focus. The car is then slowed to a halt, the report said.'"
Ob (Score:5, Funny)
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The correct quote is:
"I'm sorry Dave. I'm afraid that's something I cannot allow to happen."
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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062622/quotes [imdb.com]
"I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that. "
Re:Ob (Score:5, Funny)
In any case, I give up. Winning in pedantry wars isn't really all it's cracked up to be.
Re:Ob (Score:5, Funny)
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You must be new here
Old Joke (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ob (Score:4, Informative)
"I'm sorry, Dave, but you're drunk and I won't allow you to start operating a heavy metal object which could kill many people if you're not alert." Not quite as catchy, I suppose.
These are already used in Australia, anyway. If you're convicted of a drink-driving offence, then your car must be fitted with an alcohol interlock [vic.gov.au] for at least six months.
Re:Ob (Score:5, Insightful)
They are used here in the states as well. Unfortunately, these can be easily defeated by having a child or friend blow into the tube so the car starts.
Two of these new methods seem pretty easy to get around too. Wear gloves for the steering wheel, and sun glasses for the eye thingie. My biggest fear is a false positive!
Don't get me wrong, it's great to see what Toyota is doing. However, I'm going to be pretty upset paying and extra grand for the next Toyota for a steering wheel sensor that may return a false positive, stranding my wife and daughter in a not-so-good part of town just after sunset because my wife used a alcohol based hand sanitizer.
Re:Ob (Score:5, Informative)
Well this sucks. (Score:5, Funny)
I really don't have the trunk space to be hauling around a child just to get my car started.
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Oh you can cut them down pretty small so I wouldn't worry about that aspect of it.
Re:YES, starts.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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"and most who use coke don't do it while drinking (it would be a waste)"
That's
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Re:Ob (Score:4, Informative)
In some states it's illegal to drive drunk on private property. (Like being in your driveway.) For example, that Mythbusters episode on the subject of drunk vs. cell phone, the cops wouldn't let them drive on a private lot. In WI, you can get blasted, and drive around your back 40 all you want.
On the other hand, getting out of a bar, realizing you are too drunk, and sleeping it off in your own back seat in the bar parking lot will also get you arrested for driving drunk.
Those fucking MADD people have lost their way, and are actively pushing all these draconian laws. They want to ban any sort of alcohol completely, not just make the roads safer. Their original founder thinks they are whack now even....
http://www2.potsdam.edu/hansondj/InTheNews/Drinki
Will blow for food (Score:5, Funny)
Re:fatal flaw (Score:3, Funny)
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Software Glitch (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Software Glitch (Score:5, Informative)
Hmmm... ever wonder what the term "alcohol related accidents" actually means? Here's some of the meanings:
1.) A measurable amount of alcohol means anything above .00 percent, up to and including a sip of beer or cough medicine.
2.) Drivers impaired by drugs, be it aspirin, cough syrup, crack or heroin, are often counted as drunk drivers.
3.) If a pedestrian is involved and has a measurable amount of alcohol it is considered alcohol-related.
4.) If a passenger has alcohol in his system, it is considered alcohol related.
5.) If the accident is a sober driver's fault (i.e. a sober driver runs a red light and crashes into a driver who had a beer after work) it is alcohol-related.
6.) If the residual presence of alcohol is found (an empty beer can) it is considered alcohol related, even if tests prove no one has any alcohol in their systems.
7.) The NHTSA arbitrarily adds 9% to all the alcohol-related statistics it receives from the states. Why? Because they feel like it.
8.) To further inflate the numbers, The NHTSA just started using what they call the Multiple Imputation Method to inflate alcohol-related statistics even more. The method automatically assumes that anyone involved in an accident who was not tested for BAC (probably because they were obviously sober) could actually have been drunk, and the numbers are jacked up by a set percentage.
Kind of changes the numbers a bit, doesn't it? Numbers are meaningless unless you know what they mean. But continue pushing for prohibition if you wish... but be honest at least...
All material taken from the article Fighting Madd [drunkard.com].
Nephilium
A man who doesn't drink is not, in my opinion, fully a man. -- Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Russian author
Re:FUCK YOU, spin-master. (Score:5, Interesting)
You want the figures... here's an analysis of the numbers from the NHTSA themselves... [getmadd.com]
If you can prove the claim, here's $20,000 [getmadd.com] for you...
And... well... you can't cry if I link [dot.gov] the NHTSA's actual numbers, can you? Of course, pay special attention to the passenger, rider, and NON-OCCUPANT figures... that means that the driver had no alcohol in his system, but someone in the car did...
And please note the difference between alcohol-related, and BAC .08+. Also, please do a little look to see what .08 BAC does to reflexes... and how little it takes to get there.
Also... look into the actual statements of MADD, and look what they're fighting for... and look into a nobody named Candy Lightner, and check into her current job, and why she is currently doing it.
Or look into the GAO's research to the NHTSA's claims...
I can only lead you to the information, I can't make you read them, nor can I make you believe in them.
Nephilium... currently enjoying a tasty barleywine... [ratebeer.com]
Sometimes too much drink is barely enough. -- Mark Twain, American novelist
Re:FUCK YOU, spin-master. (Score:5, Informative)
Also... look into the actual statements of MADD, and look what they're fighting for... and look into a nobody named Candy Lightner, and check into her current job, and why she is currently doing it.
Cliff notes for the lazy:
Dangerous (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Dangerous (Score:5, Funny)
Drunk : *starts using towel*
*time elapsed*
Car : Drunk driver detected, shutting down in 60, 59, 58, 57...
Drunk : *mashes gas pedel*
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Re:Dangerous (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Dangerous (Score:5, Insightful)
give me a button though (Score:2)
a. disables ABS
b. disables automatic transmision gear changes
c. disables stability control
Put that where I can operate it easily in a stressful situation, and I'll be really happy. The ABS can save me if I'm not paying attention, but I can take control when I expect the car to misbehave.
(most common example: braking on loose sand)
Re:Dangerous (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Dangerous (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd agree that refusal to start the car is probably a good idea - possible false positives by the drunk idiot in shotgun throwing up notwithstanding. There are however several drivers I know (and unfortunately been driven by) who need control taken away from them when sober to begin with. Theres a lot of people out there who ought not be be given driving licenses. Pretty much every time I'm on the interstate I see some car crash - read about it the next day and chances are are its DUI. I'm fine with control being taken away because it seems we are getting much better at cars that can drive themselves.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/ne
Also there are tons of things you could do if you weren't actually driving the car and it would be brilliant for long road trips.
Really... (Score:5, Interesting)
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A) Have no bloody idea what's going on, and stare to find out
or
B) Know that the person is drunk and immediately start digging for the cell phone, start changing lanes to get the
Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:4, Insightful)
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We shall see. (Score:3, Insightful)
What if... Insurance was much cheaper with this car...
It won't be cheaper if it causes more accidents than it prevents, it will be more expensive. Accidents cost money. The insurance companies will know if this works or not and charge accordingly.
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Re:Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:4, Interesting)
What would the liability be when the drunk kills another because "if I was too drunk to drive, why did my car start?"
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Do you really think they'd make it work like that? You'd probably have a series of alarms that gradually got more intrusive, finally a speed governor kicking in that gradually brought you to a stop. But it probably isn't a good idea to be drinking while you're driving on the freeway anyway.
Re:Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:4, Funny)
I have never been horny in my life, and never will be, so I'd gladly see this boner-alert feature in every car sold. Mandatory is fine with me.
What the fuck, they already offer the heated massage seats... Why not put out a happy ending to boot?
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Re:Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:4, Funny)
KNOW YOUR DRUNKARD! YOUR LIFE MAY DEPEND ON IT! You will not be able to see his eyes because of Tea-Shades, but his knuckles will be white from inner tension... and his pants will be crusted with semen from constantly jacking off when he can't find a rape victim... He will stagger and babble when questioned. He will not respect your badge. The Drunkard fears nothing. He will attack, for no reason, with every weapon at his command -- including yours... BEWARE. Any officer apprehending a alcohol addict should use all necessary force immediately. One stitch in time [on him] will usually save nine on you.
Seriously though, just because you disagree with something doesn't mean it should be illegal.
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I don't want to pay for this feature, I don't want the government to mandate it for my own good (see first 3 words of this post), and I don't want it crapping out because it thinks I'm steering strangely.
*maybe* mandate this for those who are convicted of driving trunk, but I think a better deterrent would be to not allow them to drive period. "But then I can
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Do you know what I would do if my car decided it was going to slow me down while blasting down a busy Boston highway with traffic moving at 70 mph due to a false positive? I would be utterly fucked and have a few seconds to act before getting plowed into twenty times by cars moving twice my speed.
Anyone who wants to defeat t
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Maybe you shouldn't be blasting down a busy Boston highway with a drunk who insist on grabbing the steering wheel sitting next to you ?-)
But anyway, I admit being somewhat uneasy about some system
Re:Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:5, Interesting)
So what you are saying is that you are entirely ignorant of the topic. You are likely the only person on the forum that has no context to place any of their reasoning on because you have no experience to give you that context. A single drink of alcohol is not a substantial enough amount to make an average adult male feel any effect. As any adult male who has experienced a drink could tell you. I am not talking bout being 'buzzed' or 'drunk', a single drink is not enough to be able to even tell that you have drank any without the aftertaste. A single drink would put an average male over the legal limit. If at a business meeting I had a single drink to avoid offending my boss by refusing his offer, would my car stop operating? I would have a serious problem with that.
"Add up all of those what ifs, and you'll still come up WAY short of the 17,000 people killed each year by drunk drivers."
There aren't 17,000 people killed each year by drunk drivers. There aren't even 17,000 people who died to make up that figure. At least 15% of that 17,000 were added to make up for the ones that the stats missed. As someone else already pointed out, you can find plenty of information about other nonsense that goes into those figures here:
http://www.drunkard.com/issues/08_02/08_02_fighti
Personally I doubt drunk drivers are responsible for nearly as many accidents as senior citizens. Here in Florida we have the gray panthers lobbying and stopping legislation go in place that would require grandma to show quick response times to keep her license. Don't get me wrong, grandma is almost never in an accident. She will blissfully drive through an intersection and go on her way without seeing the collision that resulted from her action. Traffic accidents are usually caused by someone careless, that doesn't mean the careless one is the one who had the accident.
I am against anyone modifying my car, computer, stereo, TV, clock, lights, or any other tool I own or purchase in a way that removes control from me. If this something is taking control from me because that will allow the tool to perform its function in some improved way, I might be willing to give on this point with little grumbling. But we are talking about something that removes control from the drivers of the car and does so for reasons that have NOTHING to do with improving the operation of the vehicle.
P.S. Choosing not to be drunk is something to be proud of. Willfully choosing ignorance is the definition of stupidity.
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Jumping into a pool of lava is an action that is known to cause harm. Taking a drink is not.
"I am missing out on exactly zero by not drinking. I have a full and happy life."
No, your missing out on whatever can be learned about yourself and the things around you that could be experienced with an altered perception. Saying you are missing out on nothing by not doing so is the same as saying there
Re:Imagine if this malnfunctioned on the freeway (Score:5, Funny)
There's no shame in not drinking though, but to associate them is just silly. Voting republican, IMO, causes more deaths each year than drinking. But that's my opinion, and doesn't make it right.
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No one has a single glass of wine with dinner and then does all those things, either.
If you believe that you would have a problem with keeping it to just a single glass, hey, great, you've made the right choice for yourself and I applaud you for it.
As far as this gi
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I scored a 24!
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And they have a point, given that the outspoken "conservatives" are usually idiots, and the real ones do
DICoK (Score:2)
I haven't got children. If it is not legal to be drunk in charge of a car then how the fuck can it be legal to be drunk in charge of a kid?
Alcohol on hands (Score:3, Interesting)
Suppose that I work in a bar and there's alcohol on my hands because I just spent the last eight hours wiping down tables. What then?
Driver responsibility! (Score:5, Insightful)
What is really broken with this whole concept is that it takes away driver responsibility and nannies the driver. Instead of making drivers responsible, we make them victims: "It isn't my fault I drove drunk! The car let me drive! Go sue Toyota or put a Toyota exec in jail.". All these so-called safety devices just give users a false sense of safety.
Cars are fucking dangerous things and need to be driven carefully. I think it would be a GoodIdea to strip all the safety gear from the driver (passenger safety is OK). If drivers didn't have airbags and safety belts and crumple zones perhaps they'd spend a bit more time thinking about driving rather than texting etc.
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Killing the car while diving can be just as bad (Score:4, Interesting)
Also abnormal steering can come form trying to get a round a road hazard.
Alcohol Schmalcohol (Score:3, Insightful)
(and by teenager, I mean "any idiot who thinks that they don't need to pay attention to other road users")
(and by cell phone, I don't just mean making calls. Thumb-typers, you know who you are)
How to lie with statistics 101 (Score:3, Insightful)
The thing is, Everyone Knows driving while
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If by "big target" you mean the one that kills the most people on the road, then you're right.
easy cheating (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:easy cheating (Score:5, Funny)
There are ways this could be more interesting. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:There are ways this could be more interesting. (Score:5, Funny)
Alcohol Sweat Detection... Not so good (Score:2)
When I get a cut or a scratch, I clean it with alcohol. (because short of amputating the hand, it's the ONLY way to be sure!) One would assume that at least some of this alcohol would stay on my hands when I drive.
I don't drive drunk. Ever. Still my car would be cutting out whenever I've treated one of my numerous injuries.
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BTW, alcohol is not a good disinfectant because it evaporates quite fast and does not kill all bacteria. Iodine solutions or modern antiseptics are much better.
Evidently, we are a species of perpetual children. (Score:5, Insightful)
Remarkable how we devise elaborate technologies to serve as nannies in lieu responsible adult behavior.
Re:Evidently, we are a species of perpetual childr (Score:3, Insightful)
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The reality is that people under the influence of alcohol have a hard time engaging in "responsible adult behavior".
P.S. This isn't a recent phenomena.
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Re:Evidently, we are a species of perpetual childr (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to make damn sure that it isn't nanniesm, we'll put a boxing glove in ontop of the airbag to give you a broken nose if you try to operate while drunk. There. Not being a nanny, being the friend you should have with you.
i dunno... (Score:5, Insightful)
what's going to happen the first time a few people are together drinking in a responsible fashion and one gets sick/injured and someone needs to get him to professional help and the car won't work due to their "risky" behavior? who's going to be liable for what on that day?
Re:i dunno... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Thank god I live in Canada! (Score:3, Funny)
If the car is so smart... (Score:2)
No, really, I'm serious.
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Easily beatable (Score:5, Funny)
Pfft. Gloves.
or if a special camera shows that the driver's pupils are not in focus.
Pfft. Blindfold.
You'll have to try harder than that to infringe on my freedoms, Toyota!
Will we have the law? (Score:2)
Nobody will pay for this technology until the law is passed that every car must have this equipment, and that will not happen in 10 years.
Aside from that, I don't see this as "too wrong". We already give a lot of control to the computer, like ABS. Also, note the article says "will not start", not "shut down". If the engine is already running, the system will not kick in. So to circumvent it, just drink after you start the engine.
Legal issues (Score:2, Interesting)
About time (Score:2)
I do agree that taking control of a car while it is operating is a bad thing. The driver should always have control while the vehicle is in motion. Whether it is a good or bad thing if the driv
Both ineffective and dumb (Score:3, Interesting)
As far as the 'features' of this car, I don't want them. I can prevent myself from drive drunk without my cars help, thank you very much. The last thing in the world do I want three separate systems to disable my car. The alcohol sensor could be triggered by other sources of alcohol. More scary, the erratic driving and the lack of pupil focusing could be triggered by poor pattern recognition. The last thing in the world I want is for the car to decide is that I am not focusing enough due to a glitch and try and slow me down on in the middle of a Boston highway during heavy traffic chugging along at 70 mph.
If Toyota wants put in a safety feature that I would actually want, give me a system to warn me that I am falling asleep THAT I CAN TURN OFF. I don't mind my car warning me that my driving is looking funny or that it seems like I am not focused, but I want to be able to disable the warning should it become clear that there is a glitch. The last thing in the world I want is for it to take control away from me. I would rather veer off the road and hit a treat then come to a dead stop in the middle of a highway. Trees only hit you ounce.
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I think part of the problem is that people don't always quite realize that they're too drunk to drive. Having the car refuse to start and, say, tell you "You're drunk!" could help clue them in.
Add GPS, auto-dialer, electric shock, etc. (Score:2, Interesting)
Patent pending.
Inane. (Score:2)
I like this (Score:2)
That said, I'm much more in favor o
that's OK (Score:3, Funny)
Washing your hands (Score:2)
As for false negatives - wear gloves and sunglasses, and as long as you don't swerve too much (which most drunk drivers don't - they drive perfectly fine until something goes wrong and can't react quick enough) you're absolutely fine.
Dumb idea, but interesting (Score:2)
About time! (Score:2)
Control-freak magnet (Score:4, Interesting)
On a philosophical level, I think it's antithetical to freedom for technology to be required to prevent people from deliberately doing wrong. The choice to break the law should be up to the individual. Consider if the Montgomery buses had had skin-albedometers and some odd contraption to move Rosa Parks where she "belonged" -- you can't have civil disobedience if disobedience is impossible. Consider if printing presses were somehow rigged to refuse to print the Pentagon Papers or anything else the government thought was illegal to print. If cars had a 55mph speed governor during the years of the US national maximum speed limit, would that law have ever been repealed? Granted, these are arguments against mandating the technology, not against its development, but for the reasons I stated above, this technology is pretty much a control-freak magnet.
So (Score:4, Insightful)
Are they going to call this "Trusted Commuting"?