A Self-Driving Uber Car Went the Wrong Way On a One-Way Street in Pittsburgh (qz.com) 254
An anonymous reader writes: Uber driver Nathan Stachelek was pulled off to the side of the road when he saw the self-driving car turn the wrong way. It was the night of Sept. 26 and the car he had spotted, one of the autonomous Ford Fusions that Uber is testing in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was heading through the city's Oakland neighborhood, just steps from the center of campus for the University of Pittsburgh. Stachelek watched the car turn off Bates Street and onto Atwood, a one-way road, going in the wrong direction. From a distance he couldn't tell whether the car was driving itself, or its human operator had made a mistake. Stachelek took out his phone in time to shoot a brief video of Uber's vehicle backing up and driving away, then uploaded it to Facebook. "Driverless car went down a one way the wrong way," he wrote. "Driver had to turn car around."
In all fairness (Score:5, Interesting)
In all fairness, I've done the same in Pittsburgh. Was visiting, not familiar with the city and you guys do love your one way roads. Luckily I figured it out pretty damn quick.
Re:In all fairness (Score:4, Insightful)
In all fairness, for self-driving cars to live up to the claims that proponents are making, they can't do this.
Re:In all fairness (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think anyone anywhere is claiming that self driving cares will be perfect.
That's just stupid to expect.
Lowering the 100,000+ deaths per year in the world due to humans driving is the actual goal.
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They're ready, once they're as safe as humans on the road. Which happened several years ago.
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Mathematically, "as safe as" = "as dangerous as".
Marketingmentally they're quite different.
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But they've gotten far beyond 'as safe as'. Now they're 'much less dangerous than'.
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So, you're saying there's no human accidents on one-way roads? Or just being specious for no reason?
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Except all accidents are based on per mile. And automated cars have been proven repeatedly to be much safer per mile than almost any grouping of humans.
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http://www.techtimes.com/artic... [techtimes.com]
"After the adjustments were made, the Virginia Tech study estimates that human-driven vehicles find themselves in 4.2 crashes per million miles, as opposed to self-driving cars that find themselves in 3.2 crashes per million miles."
So automated driving was, in late 2015, already (4.2-3.2/4.2) ~25% safer.
Re: In all fairness (Score:2)
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Lowering the 100,000+ deaths per year in the world due to humans driving is the actual goal.
Making a profit on self-driving car technology is the goal. Anything else is a byproduct.
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It's an American thing (Score:2)
Re:In all fairness (Score:5, Insightful)
Again, mistakes will happen. Self driving will not be perfect. To expect such is stupidity.
They are already an order of magnitude safer than the average driver.
They have already gone beyond their initial goals.
Re:In all fairness (Score:5, Informative)
Not again...
Previous BS claims were that automated cars were safer than humans. This lie was done by comparing Tesla autopilot driving to all human driving, not human divided highway driving.
Now they are 'an order of magnitude safer', what a big fat blatant lie.
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I saw a Belgian police car stop and give way to a car driving the wrong way down a one way street.
When I say driving, I mean weaving.
It was 4 in the morning.
Is there anywhere else in the world they wouldn't have pulled them over?
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If the one-waystreet sign is obfuscated, how would the car be able to recognize it as a one-way street?
I think it's supposed to know by looking at its map of the city (which is hopefully accurate and up-to-date!)
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The guy honking at me made me look at the whole co (Score:2)
> I don't know how a car would know, but a human would be able to see ... Basically, humans can look at the totality of contextual clues and put it together.
Sunday night, a car honking at me clued me in that *something* was wrong. I therefore looked around for clues, and saw the types of clues that you listed.
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Yeah, because this is the first car to ever go the wrong way on a one-way street in the history of the automobile.
You know what story you'll never see on this site, or any other news site? "Distracted driver goes wrong way on one-way street"
or "Dog bites man"
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On the other hand, if all the cars are autonomous, it won't matter if somebody gets that wrong, because all the cars will be driving the wrong way. So the only thing that makes it dangerous, even when the data is wrong, are the meatbags behind the wheels of the other vehicles.
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Re:In all fairness (Score:4, Insightful)
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I turned into a one way street driving through Oakland CA. Was looking for parking at the same time and the streets were so confusing for an out of towner. Considering all the tourists in San Fransisco it probably happens fairly often. I'd trust most self driving cars more than myself in that town, especially at night.
I'll just let other people Beta test them however. :-)
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If Google Maps isn't sending drivers the wrong way down that street, I doubt very much that the car's software would make that mistake.
Since that the car had a driver in it, I'd be willing to bet that the vehicle was under human control. But even if it wasn't, the software will be fixed, and no Google car will ever make that mistake again, whereas you can be quite certain that human drivers will c
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In all fairness, for self-driving cars to live up to the claims that proponents are making, they can't do this.
In all fairness, the proponents aren't claiming that SDCs are perfect, just better than HDCs.
Also, whatever bug or DB error that caused this specific problem has probably already been fixed. SDCs will improve. HDCs will not. You can't fix bugs in wetware.
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From a distance he couldn't tell whether the car was driving itself, or its human operator had made a mistake.
It is not even sure that the car was self driving.
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Please update your stereotype. All the drivers that earned the BMW badge the reputation of being complete cocks now drive Audi.
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I think for a looong time people who own Self Driving Cars will be viewed with the same scorn and derision from which BMW drivers suffer, as those owners act with the same arrogance and assumed privilege with which BMW drivers act.
Except my understanding is that self-driving cars will actually use turn signals...
Re:Self Driving and BMW drivers (Score:4, Insightful)
At least they don't drive in the Lexus Lanes when they are only supposed to be used by Lexus owners and carpools....
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What?
Every now and then Mustangs need to feed.
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What's the difference between a porcupine and a BMW?
The porcupine has pricks on the outside.
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Sure they're known for driving like assholes, but that's far overshadowed by the their reputation of parking like drunken assholes.
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If the goal is to be at least as good as people....well, it happens. It just needs to be able to quickly realize it made a mistake and correct.
If there's one place computers still have a long way to go it's the ability to do open-ended learning. And that includes the ability to learn they've made a mistake.
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That's like saying it isn't really brass, it's just a mixture of copper and zinc.
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other possibility... (Score:5, Funny)
perhaps it became self aware, and was trying to commit suicide to escape an existence in bondage?
Google maps in NY city does this (Score:5, Interesting)
This summer in Manhatten, between battery park and Grenich village, google maps told me to turn the wrong way on a one way street, a major road, that has always been one way. Apple maps on my wifes phone got it right. If google can mess up that spectacularly in the most well characterized city in the world this is not surprising.
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Self-driving cars absolutely must not rely on map data or GPS to operate properly. A self-driving car must be able to read road signs and traffic conditions at least as well as a human in order to claim the title self-driving. Not to say a self-driving car might not still make the same mistake, but if it makes the mistake 100% of the time due to incorrect map data, it is not a self-driving car. It's a particularly advanced rail system.
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It used to tell me to get on a freeway going the wrong way. I tried informing them and years later they hadn't fixed it.
Re:In all fairness (Score:4, Insightful)
Murphy's Law of Computing #8:
To screw up is human, to screw up royally requires a computer.
The issue has never been one self driving car screwing up vs one driver screwing up - the machine will eventually beat the human there (and arguably it already has). The issue is that one mistake on a map update or some defect in the algorithm, and the possibility that you'll have cars full of people driving over the edge of an incomplete bridge for hours on end. That's always been my personal reluctance for enthusiastically embracing self driving cars.
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Murphy's Law of Computing #8:
To screw up is human, to screw up royally requires a computer.
Corollary: Human can screw up bigger, faster, better, with computers. Also see: Epic Fail.
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In all fairness, I've done the same in Pittsburgh. Was visiting, not familiar with the city and you guys do love your one way roads. Luckily I figured it out pretty damn quick.
We forgive you because you don't have a GPS embedded in your head that constantly tells you where you are and has the direction of all roads mapped.
Add to that, this is a test limited to a single municipality. It's not a case of "oh, well the GPS map was out-of-date because we wont be aware of construction being done three states away immediately". This is a relatively small test bed and Uber should be watching like a hawk for local issues to update the test vehicles.
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It's not illegal to go the wrong way on a one-way street. It's illegal to disobey road markings.
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Everyone who has seen Blade Runner knows how that'll turn out
for some company executives...
They trained Uber's self-driving cars to play chess? Also, I don't think the elevator at their corporate office can carry a vehicle to the top floor.
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Uber was drunk on ethanol
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I see north then south I am going the right way, but south then north stop immediately
Interesting idea, but too easy to DoS using two magnets from the hardware store:
(N===S) [trolled car] (S===N)
RFID chips into the asphalt.
That's actually a pretty good and inexpensive idea, if failing to communicate with an RFID tag doesn't render the car immobile.
even Apple maps has it right (Score:2)
I'm not even a resident of Pittsburgh or student at CMU and I could figure that out.
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Hey, it worked fine on the machine in my office too... Must have been a hardware problem, no way the software is to blame! (Said many programmers to me in the past.)
Nothing wrong, just a few dead pets and toddlers (Score:2)
As expected, the car was undamaged and only collateral damage was a few kids and kittens crushed in the process
Let us know when you've got a story (Score:5, Insightful)
he couldn't tell whether the car was driving itself, or its human operator had made a mistake
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Well, ONE of them was loopy on the Ethanol fuel mixture .
Zoning needed (Score:5, Insightful)
We need regulating bodies and driverless car makers to agree on standards and zoning.
A driverless car has sensors, not eyes and spatial awareness. It has GPS and map data not a sense of direction.
If the data fed to the car says it can turn into oncoming traffic (and there are no vehicle so the sensors don't alert some wannabe AI) it will turn. Any human that might make the error will very quickly notice they are going the wrong way without the need for cars. the might notice how (most) cars are parked facing in a certain direction or road markings that give clues like "no entry" and the corresponding road markings.
Car AI cannot yet read these properly. Forget reading in time or when it's raining and the sign is slightly eroded or placed at an odd angle.
A human can spot a branch handing on power lines dangling in the wind, a sensor designed to avoid collisions with other cars cannot.
I'm certain that driverless cars will get much better and will very quickly be safer than a human driver despite these and other faults BUT to make it all so much safer we need approved zones. Like zoning for congestion or weight/height limits.
Car manufacturers will know that in these specific zones/highways they can expect a rather predictable set of road conditions. A human can drive the car out of some odd city intersection with angry aggressive drivers in rush-hour then switch to autopilot for that boring and predictable 100 mile highway journey. (Or not if you like that sort of driving)
When a driverless car can navigate A to B across a busy city in India it might be ready to do away with zoning but until then it's simply necessary and I believe it's just a matter of time until zoning happens.
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Substituting "cameras" for "eyes," why can't a driverless car have all of the above?
Re:Zoning needed - for humans (Score:2)
We should really make driverless the default and keep the distracted, poor sighted, slow reacting humans out of traffic in congested areas. If you want to make things work smoothly, that's the better solution.
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People drive the wrong way on freeways and freeway entrance / exit ramps regularly. You are likely to die when you do it, but it does happen.
Combination (Score:3, Insightful)
"There are literally millions of things that decent, off-the-shelf sensors can detect---things that humans cannot perceive, either due to sensory or attention limitations."
Yes that still does not reduce the GP's argument that there are also many problems that a computer-operated vehicle cannot perceive either. The best solution still seems to be a combination of the two: a human driver, and sensors/warnings/etc to augment him/her
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Car with funny looking thing on top goes wrong way (Score:4, Interesting)
From a distance he couldn't tell whether the car was driving itself, or its human operator had made a mistake. Stachelek took out his phone in time to shoot a brief video of Uber's vehicle backing up and driving away, then uploaded it to Facebook. "Driverless car went down a one way the wrong way," he wrote. "Driver had to turn car around."
Well, was it driverless or did it have a driver? If it had a driver, was the driver in control? Which would make it just a funny looking car and a confused human operator?
Verdict: meh.
so...? (Score:2)
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We all have... I would also (Score:2)
We all have... I would also comment that in this day and age a modest mapping device installed on squad cars
in metro areas can record data that the city map makers are unable to maintain. Very high leverage in rural areas.
Like the Waze application has demonstrated mapping and traffic feedback is darn easy.
Waze might have a class of users "city+state roads, police" that have +10 reliability
points for reported map errors accidents and obstructions.
Facts like this today are just data. The community can hel
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a modest mapping device installed on squad cars
Every route to the donut shop accurately mapped.
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a modest mapping device installed on squad cars
Every route to the donut shop accurately mapped.
As long as the map is correct.. It is a start. ;-)
I have nothing against donuts BTW.
Slow news day? (Score:2)
Must be a slow news day, I guess.
Shortcut (Score:3)
Oh good, they've already learned to take shortcuts!
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You have your map upside down... It was going south, towards Downtown.
Isn't English grand....
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This car, and dozens of cars with drivers everyday in Pittsburgh. I was forced onto the sidewalk about a week ago by a driver driven car that did this. (not the same street)
Were you a pedestrian at the time?
You know that if you were a pedestrian, you're *supposed to* use the sidewalk instead of the street, right? New York is *not* San Francisco, where people who walk have priority over cars, and people on bicycles have priority over everyone else.
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Pittsburgh != NY. Also, given the way they drive in Pittsburgh, I wouldn't be surprised if he was in a car driving the correct way down the street, and went onto the sidewalk to evade a car coming wrong way down the (one way) street.
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I'm not in San Francisco, or New York either, but sometimes I see so many people walking out in the street that I'd probably be better off driving on the sidewalk!
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In the automotive world, there are proving grounds to work out the kinks, not shared with the general populace or pedestrians and what not. If over a ton of equipment makes potentially unsafe maneuvers, it's hard to ever consider it 'minor'. It's only minor because another car wasn't going down that street or a pedestrian didn't step out at the wrong time because they failed to expect a car coming from where it shouldn't (yes a pedestrian should always be vigilant, but in practice particularly in well wal
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I think a better metric of safe would be, "how many human drivers make this mistake per day" vs "how many self driving cars make this mistake per day"
Your post appears to be written from the perspective that a human driver would never ever turn the wrong way down a one way street; my guess would be that in 5 years 1% of human drivers will continue to make the same mistake, while
Is it perfect? Nope. Is it better than the status quo? Yep. Will it continue to improve? Probably.
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Both DRUNK on Ethanol.
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My car has a driver when it's not operating autonomously. is it a driverless car?