Tesla Crash Won't Stop Driverless Car Progress: Renault-Nissan CEO (cnbc.com) 96
Problems Issues with Tesla's self-driving software that were linked to the death of a driver this year would not block the development of autonomous vehicles, Carlos Ghosn, the chief executive of Renault-Nissan, said on Tuesday. From a report on CNBC: In September, Tesla revealed the death of a man in one of its cars in a crash in the Netherlands and said that the "autopilot" software's role in the accident was being investigated. "In the moments leading up to the collision, there is no evidence to suggest that Autopilot was not operating as designed and as described to users: specifically, as a driver assistance system that maintains a vehicle's position in lane and adjusts the vehicle's speed to match surrounding traffic," Tesla said in a blog post at the time. This incident shone a spotlight on autonomous driving features currently in cars as automakers are in a race to bring fully driverless cars on the road. During an interview at the Web Summit technology conference in Lisbon, Ghosn said that the teething problems with Tesla's autonomous software would not derail the industry's push.
oh... good (Score:5, Funny)
I thought for sure that we had seen the last of this push for self driving cars.... I sure am glad that this guy was here to tell us that a possible mistake at a different company won't derail their plans.... whew...
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On the other hand, firms should not be sued when they have made all reasonable efforts to make their products as safe as possible and someone is injured or dies despite their best efforts. Rather, they should be able to properly apologize and make amends without placing themselves in a legally untenable situation wherein they risk an enormously overblown lawsuit.
Unfortunately, this would require a fair and equitable legal system, reasonable people involved on both sides, and reliable independent oversight e
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On the other hand, firms should not be sued when they have made all reasonable efforts to make their products as safe as possible
The problem is that "as safe as possible" also means "unaffordable". Should all cars have side impact airbags, and auto-braking collision detection? What about external airbags to protect pedestrians? That will lead to low income people being unable to buy a new car, and so continuing to drive older cars that are even more dangerous, both to themselves and to others.
The US Dept of Transportation puts a value on a human life [wikipedia.org] at $9.4M when considering safety improvements to highways. It seems reasonable t
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You are an idiot, the guy was an idiot and the world needs this sort of evolution to weed out the idiots because they are ruining the world.
- This was NOT an autonomous system - just smart cruise control.
- The guy was a moron for using it otherwise and CAUSED his own death by doing so
- Even if 100 morons died this way, no one should be sued and no one should stop doing all this great work
- The number of autonomous deaths IN TOTAL is a small fraction of the human controlled de
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Except that there was no malfunction here. Like most of these Autopilot stories, Autopilot wasn't actually in use.
But wait, I hear you saying, the article says:
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One joy at a time (Score:1)
Get your enjoyable cars now before the pleasure of driving becomes a thing of the past.
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But they may make the road far more fun. All the driver less cars get out of the way of people actualy driving. No more hyper milers doing 45 on the highway, or granny's etc. Speeding by them all in a 53 vet etc will be fun.
Longer term it will lead to a push to up speed limits to what people are actualy comfortable at (80 ish on most highways).
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Suppose there are a lot of them. Everyone of them is doing 53. Because they are a lot of them, they will be in all the lanes. Now you can't pass any of them. You will be stuck in their matrix doing 53 as well. For you to be able to pass, one lane needs to be going faster than the other. Not going to happen with self driving cars.
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Roads today have more than enough capacity to fit everyone into (N-1) lanes. The reason they can't and don't is because human drivers are bad and inefficient.
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Get your enjoyable horse breeds now before the pleasure of horse back riding becomes a thing of the past.
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go someplace with less traffic and less asshole drivers.
... like a private closed track. Human driven cars should not be on public roads, and the sooner we can phase them out, the better.
Re: One joy at a time (Score:1)
Driving's a chore
Sure it is... when you fucking suck at it!
Feeble loser.
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There are plenty of good drivers who simply don't enjoy driving. Discounting them simply because it's convenient or emotionally satisfying doesn't portray you in a rational light.
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Just not on any tax-supported road.
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I'd like to see a CEO-less company. As well as HR-less. Why does automation always get rid of OUR jobs, never theirs?
There are already many CEO-less companies (e.g., run by committee like DPR construction, Abercrombie & Fitch two >$1B companies) and even more HR-less companies (many smaller companies totally outsource HR). There are even a couple companies where you can even outsource the CEO position.
Too bad (Score:1)
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It has been. It's roughly an order of magnitude safer than humans, statistically.
If, today, EVERY car was swapped out with a Tesla self driving car in the US, roughly 30,000 lives would be saved within a year.
But, yeah, it's not perfect. It's only a lot better than humans.
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Ummm, to use your own article.
Autonomous vehicles would have to be driven hundreds of millions of miles ... to demonstrate their reliability in terms of fatalities and injuries.
Telsa: We've drive over a hundred million miles. We're still an order of magnitude safer than humans. And we're simulating 3 million miles/day for continued testing.
So, where am I wrong?
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I did. You don't seem to know what Tesla has done. Probably because it's not covered in your RAND reports.
They have driven that many miles, 6 months ago. And simulated 10x more. And they have 100,000 cars on the roads doing this every day.
http://www.theverge.com/2016/5... [theverge.com]
Also, " the problem is that consumers CAN'T "test-drive" on public roads enough to even demonstrate parity in vehicle safety" is a lot of horseshit.
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I was not aware that Tesla owner had given expressed or implied permission to Tesla to spy on their driving, to upload the data to Tesla's servers and to use this data for Tesla's profit without any compensation of any kind.
I also thought that Tesla was not until recently developing their own autopilot. I thought they had subcontracted Mobileye for this [wccftech.com]. Now Mobileye and Tesla have parted ways, to whom does this data belong ?
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You're not paying attention then.
"The car computer will then silently compare when it would have braked to the driver action and upload that to the Tesla database."
https://www.tesla.com/blog/upg... [tesla.com]
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To demonstrate that fully autonomous vehicles have a fatality rate of 1.09 fatalities per 100 million miles (R=99.9999989%) with a C=95% confidence level, the vehicles would have to be driven 275 million failure-free miles. With a fleet of 100 autonomous vehicles being test-driven 24 hours a day, 365 days a year at an average speed of 25 miles per hour, this would take about 12.5 years.
Except, Tesla doesn't have a fleet of only 100 vehicles. It has around 1000 times that, who pump out about 50,000 miles of Autonomous driving every two months (May report was 100 million miles driven on Autopilot, and July report was 150 million miles driven on Autopilot see: https://electrek.co/2016/07/11... [electrek.co]). Given those rates, and considering that they've already amassed 150 millio
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Does it prove that it's safe in all driving conditions? Absolutely not. But it's not meant to be used in all driving conditions, so that's besides the point.
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on the accelerator, it would "autodrive" around and around the pole for thousands
of miles without incident, as long as you had some way to continuously pump fuel into it.
Does that make it a safe car? No, because that isn't a realistic driving scenario.
Why should we believe that Tesla's tests are any more realistic?
When the NTSA certifies a car as safe to drive automatically, then I will believe it.
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Autopilot is not full self-driving. It has one forward camera, radar, and ultrasound. They have updated the radar to make accidents such as the collision with the truck unlikely, even with the old autopilot. The newest system has eight cameras, including three forward cameras. The radar is now capable of seeing the car in front of the car in front of you, and it will react if that car begins to slow. Human drivers cannot always do this. Human drivers cannot constantly monitor the surroundings of the c
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Self-driving cars have been learning from other self-driving cars since the second self-driving car was created. This is the core strength of self-driving cars (they can teach themselves and share their experiences with others), and something that has been exploited since the very beginning.
Re:Too bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Come on you know that isn't the least bit true. Tesla publishes the number of miles auto pilot has safely driven. Its impressive but those are largely the 'easy' miles.
People unlike auto pilot don't get hand off the responsible for controlling the vehicle to someone/something else when the conditions get hard. I wonder in what situations do human drivers experience more accidents, conditions where you can use auto pilot today or in situations where you can't?
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> I wonder in what situations do human drivers experience more accidents,
A little googling gives more questions than answers on that one. Most fatal accidents are at night or at intersections. Seams most minor accidents are close to home or in parking lots. Seams like the drowsy driver and missed traffic control would be covered today by Tesla type system (many equal variants from Ford and GM). The auto system will likely have issues with detecting slick roads, construction, pedestrian interactions.
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Red Barchetta (Score:1)
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Unfortunately (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Unfortunately (Score:4, Insightful)
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He meant that the human can chip ice off the windshield and headlights, so that the human driver's sensors aren't blinded by freezing rain.
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You are absolutely spot-on, in every point. This IS how it's all going to shake out, it's only a question of how much resistance people will put up along the way because driving is supposed to be fun. I for one look forward to a world of smoothly running, quiet roads, in which I summon my car (or maybe a clean auto-Uber) then simply zone out/read books/catch up on my Twitter feed via the chip in my head/nap until I arrive at my destination. We already have the expensive part of the infrastructure here (n
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The number of problems caused by autonomous cars will be inversely proportional to the number on the road.
Respectfully, I don't think you pay close attention to all the little "hiccups" that occur during daily driving - no one does, because our brains handle them with ease. As a old firmware guy, I know digital computers won't be able to do this because there are too many variables, forever changing. When you drive from now on, imagine you're blind, and have perfectly memorized the road and could drive it with no sight. In the future, look to see what alters your path during your commute (or what has chang
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Maybe you don't live in an area that has old people. But there are vehicles on the road that already can't do that.
The self braking cars are already better than most of them.
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Self-driving cars don't have to be perfect, they just have to better than the average human driver. And the average human driver sucks.
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Self-driving cars don't have to be perfect, they just have to better than the average human driver.
Maybe for you, but you don't get to choose.
The NTSA and the insurance companies will decide this,
and will only license a robocar when it is proven to be safer than any human driver.
This is a serious Problems Issues (Score:2)
He's right (Score:2)
On the first run of George Stephenson's locomotive a Member of Parliament was killed, without that this slowed down the railway becoming the future of transport.
"William Huskisson PC (11 March 1770 – 15 September 1830) was a British statesman, financier, and Member of Parliament for several constituencies, including Liverpool.[1]
He is best known as the world's first widely reported railway casualty as he was run over and fatally wounded by George Stephenson's pioneering locomotive engine Rocket."
https [wikipedia.org]
huh? (Score:2)
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The article incorrectly mixes two Tesla accidents (Score:1)
curso NR 10 (Score:1)