Who 'Owns' the Google Driverless Car IP? 129
theodp writes "Google co-founder Sergey Brin recently revealed that he is now leading Google's efforts to ready a driverless car for the consumer market, but one big, publicly-unanswered question is: Who exactly owns the intellectual property behind the highly-touted vehicles? To develop the Google Car, the company said it tapped 'the very best engineers from the DARPA Challenges,' a series of autonomous vehicle races organized by the U.S. government which provided university teams with millions in development funding and millions more in prizes. Last year, Carnegie Mellon reported that 8 of the 15-member Google Car team had current or past ties to DARPA Challenge participants CMU and Stanford. Whether Google's sponsorship of the Stanford Racing Team and CMU Tartan Racing entitled it to the IP is unclear. Clouding matters further is that key Google Car Team members are listed as inventors of autonomous car technology in pending patents assigned to the likes of General Motors and Toyota, and it was reported that the credit (and liability) for another key team member's successful robotic, autonomous Prius project was his-and-his-alone, not Google's. Could another party lay claims to the technology, or does Google have all of its IP ducks in a row on this one?"
The other question should who wants own the rights (Score:2)
The other question should who wants own the rights?
As all it will take is 1 death or serious injury for the some one to get sued and maybe lose millions + there may also be some criminal liability that may also fall on the people who coded, run the systems, build the system, linked this system to the car and so on.
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I am not a scientist nor a statistician, but I am fairly certain more than one person has died in an automobile accident. In fact some died in accidents that were the result of poor car design.
How would this be any different?
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Re:The other question should who wants own the rig (Score:4, Informative)
You missed the part about deaths occurring due to poor engineering in automobiles. This has already happened and the company involved still exists.
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Yeah, it's even more than poor engineering. It's poor engineering that the company knew about and then calculated how many people would likely die due to it [and how much they would have to pay out] versus how much it would cost to fix for everyone, and found it was cheaper to let a bunch of random people die than fix the problem.
Re:The other question should who wants own the rig (Score:4, Insightful)
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Flip side: With these cars, any accidents that occur have extensive telemetry data recorded including stuff like throttle, brakes and steering, but also data from cameras and laser data.
So in the court room the data can be played back in 3d with complete accuracy.
Re:The other question should who wants own the rig (Score:4, Insightful)
In the case of an accident, Google would do what most other companies do. Offer a reasonably large settlement offer now to avoid the prospect of a 2 decade long court battle to possibly win more. Besides, chances are good that Google's car will likely cause far fewer accidents than human driven cars would, so they wouldn't need nearly as large of a settlement budget that conventional car companies do. Also, in the case of an accident, there is a huge flood of data available to the engineers to determine the exact cause of the problem and implement a solution to prevent a similar accident from happening in the future. The patch can then be applied to ALL of their vehicles currently on the road without requiring an expensive recall action.
-Restil
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Except some crashes are impossible to prevent. There will be some ambulance chasers that try to cash in on these crashes, regardless of whose fault it actually is. A likely outcome is that the lawyers trying to get money from autonomous car makers will change the question from "whose fault was it?" to "Why didn't your car prevent the crash?". Even if none of the lawyers win, the makers still have to spend a lot of money defending themselves.
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Conventional car companies don't have to pay for accidents resulting from driver error.
Maybe.
http://www.google.com.au/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=toyota+speed#pq=toyota+accelerator+problem&hl=en&sugexp=kjrmc&cp=26&gs_id=4&xhr=t&q=toyota+sudden+acceleration&pf=p&sclient=psy-ab&safe=active&source=hp&pbx=1&oq=toyota+sudden+acceleration&aq=0&aqi=g4&aql=f&gs_sm=&gs_upl=&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp=e6e6b11bd2647b75&biw=1280&bih=711&safe=on [google.com.au]
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EULA will not cover others hit by car an criminal (Score:2)
The criminal part can't just be pushed away by a EULA.
And in a auto drive car that will billed as you don't need to pay attrition to the road, cars can move in packs bumper to bumper at high speeds.
What if a auto drive car things a kid on the road is just a skunk or other road kill like squirrels, raccoons and others and just drives on.
That kids family will sue the deep pockets of Google.
Also auto insurance will have to cover the auto cars and they may want go after Google or others who made the software to
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Google would have to weigh the potential litigation costs of these auto-cars against the money they could make selling them. They would then make them or not depending on if they see a net positive to the operation financially.
Personally, I don't see any way tha
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achille_Talon [wikipedia.org] I'm guessing English is his/her second language. Their English is probably better than your French?
I'm quite impressed that a fictional comic character can post on an internet forum in the first place, never mind how good their spelling is.
Who care whose fault? You get sued anyway. (Score:2)
Any accident related to this will result in a huge fishing expedition for deep pockets. Even an unsuccessful fishing expedition will bankrupt all the graduate students in the crosshairs.
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Because in this case it would be Google's fault if someone dies. If someone dies because of his own hand then he can only blame himself...
For now perhaps, but once the technology matures we could just as easily hold manual car manufacturers responsible for any accidents caused by human error. Seat belts and airbags are required safety features now, I imagine one day automated driving will be as well.
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Except this kind of thing has been dealt with in the aviation industry before. There are many, many incidents where pilots override the autopilot and cause a crash. The same will happen here - many incidents where people who "know better" try to do something stupid and crash the car, when an automated system would have protected them. If an accident occurs, the telemetry can be used to determine why it happened and prevent it in future. If something really horrendous happens, then a recall will be issued wh
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You left out the best part, we can start drinking in cars! No more expensive taxi rides, just have the car take you home after a night at the bar.
Think of all the lives saved by DWI no longer being a problem.
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WTF are you talking about? The best part is that we can have actual working JONNY CABS! Pay the fare or it'll TRY TO MURDER YOU. That's the future I want to live in.
I also presume it'll somehow lead to women with three breasts. Definitely the future I want to live in.
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Three? Breasts in mammals are always symmetric.
Not on Mars.
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Forget the ride home from the bar:
The trip from Ohio to Florida would be far more pleasurable if I were able to be continually drunk during that time. (Actually, it is more pleasurable, but I don't dare discuss it because I'm not sure if the statue of limitations is up yet.
but who will pay for the software update will that (Score:2)
but who will pay for the software update will that be dealer only? with a big fee? What about if you need a new Computer? only the dealer can swap the system out?
Will they find a way to lock out jiffy lube, non dealer repair shops, 3rd party radios?. Updates need to be free and if a system part needs to be changed make it a recall and make so it is free to swap it out.
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That hasn't stopped the manufacturers from having custom codes in the ODB-II interface.
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You prove you can't fucking read, how you can type is a wonder for the ages.
Just to see if you catch it this time;
I did mention poor car design, which would include a self driving car that crashed. That would be pretty poor fucking design.
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Time for a 'shrink wrap license"?
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You can't sue. You broke the seal on the EULA when you opened the car door.
EULA Rule Number One: "No suing!"
"The producer of this vehicle is not responsible if it starts driving like someone out of "Death Race 2000"
"You bought it, you used it . . . it's your problem now . . ."
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The current laws in the US handle this already. The Google car requires a person in the driver seat who is paying attention, as the driver is ultimately responsible for what the car does.
I swear this sounds like bait for a trap (Score:2)
It is almost like Google designed this car to be the epitome of the worst patent law could do. That it has ties to every company possible. I mean, what next? Google throws in a built in iPod to drag apple in?
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Everything that is now in the wild that is useful has been touched by Google.
Any future tech will be prior art or pay to drive to Google.
Think back to Xerox Prac and the consultants - the only thing that mattered was Xerox and the Xerox/Apple gui deal.
Beyond the feel good students/gov/PR - if you want to sell a car with any self drive/park/nav options in the US or any country the US has
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It would be hilarious to see if this gets slammed with injunctions from all over. Then Google can go to Congress and go, "So, what's this 'spurring innovation' crap? See this? Autonomous car. Pretty innovative, huh? Oh well, off to the crusher cause it can't get out of the red flag lap of legalese."
Wouldn't happen, but I can dream...
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No, they will put an Android tablet into it and get sued by Apple and Microsoft through those means...
And thinking of Microsoft, does Microsoft have patents with their Microsoft Sync thing that could bring this in even more?
P.S. I actually kinda think this is cool in a science-fiction way, but am otherwise completely neutral about most of anything to do with it until it actually becomes realistic to get a car like this...
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Google has run roughshod over everyone else's IP. Some of it may be legit but it is a consistent pattern. For example, who would deny that YouTube is built off of loads of clips from copyrighted materials? google profits from this immensely even if they did not upload the copyrighted material themselves.
If they did not upload it, it is not their problem. They remove when they are asked to.
Google news completely rips off and sublinks to copyrighted news content without compensation or even requesting permiss
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In the current world of bullshit software programs all non-trivial software infringes on someones bullshit patent.
That was supposed to say:
In the current world of bullshit software patents all non-trivial software infringes on someones bullshit patent.
I diagnose excerpt-closing silly-questionitis (Score:1)
"does Google have all of its IP ducks in a row on this one?"
How on earth should we know this?
And why should a customer care?
Re:I diagnose excerpt-closing silly-questionitis (Score:5, Funny)
Because there's nothing worse than disorganized ducks.
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"does Google have all of its IP ducks in a row on this one?"
How on earth should we know this?
By asking?
And why should a customer care?
So the company that implements your $50,000 driverless car isn't sued out of existence by the company that holds a key patent to the system.
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If you're driving your driverless car, then I'd say its not as thoroughly implemented as you thought.
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I am pretty sure that once I am driving my car, nobody is "implementing" it any more. It is quite thoroughly implemented.
And you expect this complicated software/hardware control system to never need updates? My non-driverless car has needed more than one software update.
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Really? What kind of crap car are you driving? Mine has required none.
If I'm going to purchase a driverless car with the tacit expectation that it's going to be buggy and require regular updates, then I may as well give up and just drive my own car into a tree.
-dZ.
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The way the Google driverless car works is that it has a map of the surrounding terrain to work off of so that it can determine where in the road it is. This would need an update.
As to the car software updates, Toyota was forced to provide a software update for most of their cars recently. The software update causes the gas pedal to go to 0 whenever you hit the brake pedal so that if the engine is racing (due to a bug, or due to the gas pedal being pinned to the floor) and you hit the brake, the engine au
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Patent thickets are common occurrences. Here's a nice post from a law-professor's blog on how industry has historically resolved them: http://volokh.com/posts/1241493210.shtml [volokh.com]. No reason to think this is any different.
The link in glorious HTML [volokh.com]
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So people could click it and go there, asshole. These things called hyperlinks -- they're not just a way to make your text blue and underlined.
Why wouldn't they? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the team members are working for and/ or with Google on the project, Google can use their work on the project. Unless Google is using technology from peoples' work outside the team, there is no way a problem should arise. So, unless someone has proof that Google is in fact using work from people outside the development team or work that the members clearly state falls outside what they are doing for Google, where is there a problem?
For that matter, is this just Slashdot speculation or does one of those links actually point to a TFA (full of speculation)? Because I couldn't find one. Seriously, summaries are summaries. Don't try to turn them into not-quite-full articles themselves please Slashdot.
Also, is this actually a question someone is answering? Again, I skimmed all the links and couldn't find it. Even the last link didn't (seem to) say anything about Levandowski (the unnamed "key" team member) claiming the IP was his-and-his alone (although I may have missed it.)
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Best to name, think and talk about the ip issues before any new (import or local) car you look at has a Google tax.
THAT'S the big question? (Score:5, Insightful)
Google co-founder Sergey Brin recently revealed that he is now leading Google's efforts to ready a driverless car for the consumer market, but one big, publicly-unanswered question is: Who exactly owns the intellectual property behind the highly-touted vehicles?
In my opinion, it's a sad, sad reflection of our current technological atmosphere that "Who exactly owns the intellectual property behind the highly-touted vehicles?" is the big, publicly-unanswered question, far ahead of, say, "How is it going to work?", "What infrastructure will need to be in place for it to work?", "How much will it cost?", "What sort of services and/or functionality will it supply?", or "What's the underlying technology?", each of which are either vital considerations to the actual functioning of the car or just would be really really interesting and cool to know.
Hell, the fact that it even rates above "What are the legal ramifications of such a device?" or more specifically "How are road laws going to change with these devices on the road?" paints a picture I don't think anyone commissioned.
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Driverless cars just want to be free. Even more so for flying driverless cars ... free as a bird.
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Thing is, all those questions are secondary to the case of "Can this be brought to market or will it be injunctioned against for eternity by the courts as the patent quagmire is traversed?"
If it never goes to market, who gives a toss what current road rules need to be changed?
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>>Hell, the fact that it even rates above "What are the legal ramifications of such a device?"
From people I know that work on driverless cars, liability issues are actually the #1 issue. I.e., who pays for Timmy's brain surgery when the first driverless Prius gets into a high-speed crash.
As you say with our terrible IP laws, our society really is set up to not be able to think on the grand scale any more.
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"Most" aren't above average? (Score:3)
Everyone wants to think they are 'above average'. Most are not.
I'd say pretty much exactly half of everyone is (or isn't) 'above average' :-)
And yeah, not seeing the big problem here. Insurance will take care of accidents and liabilities, as it has for public transport, taxis, aviation etc, and as soon as self-driving cars get demonstrably better (on average) than the average human driver, the insurance will be cheaper than driving manually.
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Sorry, half of everyone is "above the median".
Depending on your distribution, there can be more than half the people having below average intelligence. Take for an extreme example of everyone having exactly the same intelligence, except for one guy not knowing his statistics. At that point, nearly everyone is above average.
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Another question is who's responsible for the car. (Score:2)
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It's actually illegal to drive above the speed limit or below the speed limit in the US. The only exceptions for civilians are when conditions dictate that one must drive more slowly or when the flow of traffic is over the speed limit.
The case of a car speeding or running a red light is almost certainly going to be less common than with drivers. The car would know ahead of time if it has time to stop for a yellow light and would push through if it didn't. Providing the cars aren't being hacked by the end us
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"It's actually illegal to drive above the speed limit or below the speed limit in the US"
This is incorrect for two reasons.
1. The US doesn't have uniform driving laws
2. I don't know of any state with such a law.
An example from california law:
http://dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22400.htm [ca.gov]
It is illegal to impede the normal flow of traffic, but it is not illegal to drive below the speed limit.
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"It's actually illegal to drive above the speed limit or below the speed limit in the US"
This is incorrect for two reasons.
1. The US doesn't have uniform driving laws
2. I don't know of any state with such a law.
I'll give you point 1, but point 2 means you must live under a rock. Given that limits can be upper and lower, you must never have seen a minimum speed sign. Let me provide one: http://www.flickr.com/photos/thetruthabout/2727717062/ [flickr.com]
I don't know how wide spread these are, but they definately have them across the river from me in Minnesota.
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I didn't say no states have minimum limits, I said I don't know of any states for which the speed limit is ALSO a lower limit.
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Suppose a driverless car is caught speeding or running a red light? Who gets the ticket? The owner? The person who programmed the route? The manufacturer who programmed the car itself? Or do the standard laws of the road not apply to these vehicles at all? If I'm hit by one of these cars, do I get to sue somebody or am I responsible for all the medical bills myself?
Initially, the driver will get a ticket, because these "driverless" cars will be sold as "driver assisted" cars - the driver will still be expected to remain in control of the car.
After years of refinement and demonstrated safe operation, the cars will be allowed to operate truly driverless, but by then the laws will have caught up.
Perhaps by the time these cars are commonplace, having valid insurance will be enforced by the car itself - if you don't have an insurance plan, the car won't move. Making your q
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Perhaps by the time these cars are commonplace, having valid insurance will be enforced by the car itself - if you don't have an insurance plan, the car won't move. Making your question of who pays in an accident moot -- the insurance company pays.
What's more likely to happen is that the cars will be sold 'pre-insured' (ie. insured by the manufacturer). This is because the probability of an 'at fault' collision being caused by the vehicle is unrelated to the skill/etc of the driver. Also, if the car causes an accident, the responsibility will end up pointing back to the manufacturer anyway - so it's pointless having the end user take out insurance if their insurance is just going to push the cost back to the manufacturers insurer.
Insurance is require
So Slashdot is a tabloid now? (Score:3)
Why is Slashdot trying to create the impression of a scandal when there isn't one? What is theodp hoping to gain from his FUD?
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Real question (Score:4, Funny)
Who 'Owns' the Google Driverless Car IP?
Google, obviously. Since they have "the" IP address for all these driverless cars, how will drivers' private data be protected?!
The horror!!! (Score:2)
Who 'Owns' the Google Driverless Car IP?
Google, obviously. Since they have "the" IP address for all these driverless cars, how will drivers' private data be protected?!
...and if you complain, does the Google car just accidentally slam you into a concrete barrier at 200km/hr?
Haven't we learnt anything from films like this: ..and most horrific of all:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Car [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christine_(1983_film) [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbie#Versions [wikipedia.org]
Man they use to show one of these awful films at school any time they had a film half-day (so the teachers could meet). Once or twice a year. The HORROR. (*They showed the Karate Kid one year but the
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silly me, I thought it was the dhcp server that owned the IPs...
Mod parent up! (Score:2)
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Canada? Colombia? Cameroon? Chile? Chad? Cuba? Cyprus? Congo (Republic of the)? Congo (Democratic Republic of the)? Czech Republic? Croatia? Côte d'Ivoire? Comoros? Cambodia? Cape Verde? Central African Republic?
c'mon, gimme a hint.
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If you're talking only about the US, saving half a million live in a decade (50,000/year) means the cars will save lives of people who would otherwise die of causes unrelated to motor vehicles, because the current rate is between 30,000 and 40,000 per year.
Worldwide, of course, you have a point, because that rate is in the 500,000 to 900,000 range per year.
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The rich sit in dachas and wonder how to herd the masses into concrete tenements. I think the goal should be to raise the standards of living of everyone.
* I realize in some high traffic cities, getting around within the city is best done with public transit
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Bang on the point. The real problem is that in America, mass transit is seen as transportation for people who can't afford a car. For the most part, mass transit in America sucks or is non-existent. Where I grew up it was the latter. If you didn't have a car, you were basically dependent on friends and family to take you places. Even sidewalks (for walking!) are very poorly implemented outside of most major cities. In rural areas like where I grew up they are also practically non-existent.
Sadly, I don't see
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Exposing the patent system rot (Score:1)
Right now, the only exposure the average American has to the patent system is from radio ads by patent trolls.
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Not a problem. (Score:2)
The article linked sounds like whining from CMU. Whittaker never really got over losing.
The Stanford team was mostly funded by Mohr Davidson Ventures and Volkswagen. Volkswagen did all the automotive parts of the project with their own people.
As for Stanford's relationship with Google, there' s no problem there. Google is a spinoff from Stanford, and Stanford owns a big chunk of stock in Google. Stanford University has a business unit, the Stanford Management Company, which runs the endowment and, am
Apple (Score:2)
Patents foster innovation! (Score:1)
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