Uber Pulls Self-Driving Cars From San Francisco, Sends Them To Arizona (sfgate.com) 150
An anonymous reader quotes a report from SFGate: Uber is moving its self-driving pilot to Arizona, one day after the California Department of Motor Vehicles ordered the autonomous vehicles off the roads in San Francisco. "Our cars departed for Arizona this morning by truck," an Uber spokeswoman said Thursday afternoon in a statement. "We'll be expanding our self-driving pilot there in the next few weeks, and we're excited to have the support of Governor Ducey." After starting its San Francisco pilot on Dec. 14, the ride-hailing company angered the mayor and officials at the DMV by refusing to get a permit to operate its self-driving cars. And so, around noon on Thursday, a fleet of Uber self-driving cars passed through the South of Market area on the backs of several flat-bed trucks. Commuters gawked at the fleet with their distinctive hoods, backing up traffic as the convoy slowly drove by. In a statement Thursday, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey called California's regulations "burdensome" and said Arizona welcomes Uber's self-driving car pilot with "open arms." "While California puts the brakes on innovation and change with more bureaucracy and more regulation, Arizona is paving the way for new technology and new businesses," he said. It is unclear which city -- or cities -- the cars are headed to.
What Could Go Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
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Unregulated self-driving cars. What could go wrong?
We should focus less on what "could" go wrong with SDCs, and focus more on what actually goes wrong with HDCs everyday: About 80 deaths per day in America alone, thousands of injuries, and more than $2 billion per day (over $800B annually) in medical costs, legal costs, and property damage. Almost all of these accidents are a result of human error.
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And a significant number of those accidents are due to 'distracted driving.' Yet it's trivial for the GPS function built into most smartphones to detect motion and disable themselves.
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One fatal flaw in that logic:
No smart phone is smarter than a human.
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Far less trivial to detect if the owner of the phone is currently the one driving.
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So let's call "almost all" of the accidents that are human caused 8 out of 10 of all accidents.
Do you think that any of those 8 will be replaced by machine driven accidents?
Surely there are machine failure modes we can't see yet once SDCs are turned loose at mass adoption levels on the full variety of possible roads and conditions. The tech will get better and those numbers will go down, but you have to introduce it to get any benefit out of it and you can't wait until the potential for machine failure is
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This.
The same logic blows up conversations regarding smart guns.
- What if the batteries die? (don't use batteries, and even then ... what if the round stovepipes? You'll run out of bullets first))
- Someone will hack the WiFi and disable or discharge the weapon ("smart" = phone?)
- What about the documented failure of (insert pilot here)? (the pilot programs were killed)
As for statistics, I point out that gun owners will most likely kill themselves (suicide, accidental discharge) or be killed by their own gun
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So you're advocating compulsory training for all gun owners? I think that's a good start, well said!
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I'd advocate gun safety training for all people, not just gun owners. It really should be some kind of unit in health education.
Guns in the US are ubiquitous and you could cut down a lot of gun accidents if people had some basic idea on how to safely handle a firearm. Focus on very basic concepts -- don't point it at someone, unload any gun not meant to be fired right away, store it in a secure location.
You could argue that many people "will never own a gun" but this doesn't mean that those same people wo
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We'll find out, but if the answer is nothing, will you admit that Uber was right and California was wrong?
The cars have already proven themselves to be incapable of driving themselves, Uber even openly admits it, and even used the fact as an excuse to not register them as selvdriving cars.
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Or possibly it was the "No commercial operation" clause... which would prohibit Uber from carrying actual paying passengers while "testing".
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You might be on to something there; Barbara Hudson threatened to ruin my life if I ever went to Canada and subsequently urged me to go there, even though I've never had any interest in going there. Barbara is of course welcome to Arizona where nobody will attempt the same thing, but it's ill advised to go to any singles bars without full disclosure in advance.
Re: What Could Go Wrong (Score:1, Informative)
Trump
trannies and Trump (Score:2)
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While the GOP may have been traditionally biased against LGBT, that's never been true of Trump. Not when he was a Democrat, and neither when he became a Republican. While he may have flipped on a lot of things from Left to Right - like single payer, support for LGBT is something he retained even after switching parties.
Ehh, Trump doesn't support (anymore, at least) gay marriage, discrimination laws, the ability to change your gender, or really any kind of positive policy for LGBT people at all. He doesn't hate them with a passion, but he doesn't even remotely consider them in comparison to religious nuts, so I'm not really sure it's even right to say that he's not traditionally GOP in attitudes.
But it wouldn't matter anyway, because Trump frankly doesn't give a shit. He's far too dependent on the support of Mike Pence
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Changing one's gender is not something that any government should pay for. Trump's stand on NC's bathroom issue, where he refused to condemn the transgender bathroom stance of the state GOP, putting him at a disadvantage wrt Ted Cruz - and this was during the GOP primary, when candidates normally veer to the right. Cruz pilloried him for stating that businesses should not be burdened w/ having to provide separate facilities for trannies. Also, unlike on everything else, where he does seem to have an opin
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Changing one's gender is not something that any government should pay for. Trump's stand on NC's bathroom issue, where he refused to condemn the transgender bathroom stance of the state GOP, putting him at a disadvantage wrt Ted Cruz - and this was during the GOP primary, when candidates normally veer to the right. Cruz pilloried him for stating that businesses should not be burdened w/ having to provide separate facilities for trannies. Also, unlike on everything else, where he does seem to have an opinion, Trump said nothing about the NC bathroom law, and was supported by Peter Thiel, even while Thiel's former company Paypal canned its plans for an office in Charlotte.
What? No one's saying the government should pay for it, although perhaps subsidizing parts of it might be a topic for discussion, if the costs are outweighed by the low amount of people who would use it and how much it improves their lives after. The point I'm making is that many republican states have laws that prevent you from changing your gender on paperwork, prohibit schools from mentioning what gay people are to their students, and most famously, North Carolina's transgender law. Trump has made a few
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Right. When Trump was asked about gay rights initially on the campaign trail, he said "look, we're all on the same team." When asked if he would overturn gay marriage, he said "the law is settled, there's nothing to do about it." When the Florida nightclub attack happened, he expressed solidarity with the victims, and correctly named the aggressor and the attack for what it was. This might not sound like a lot, but it's a big deal. Trump, even to the chagrin of his own party, is the most pro-gay republican
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Except that he took on Mike Pence as his VP, and according to Kasich's people Trump was offering the "most powerful" VP spot in the country's history, with the VP to be in charge of "foreign and domestic policy," i.e. everything.
Think of it this way. If your life is being threatened daily both IRL, and on every social media platform there is.... what do you do? You find someone that the people threatening you are going to find absolutely terrifying, and make him the guy who would have to step up, in the event of your untimely demise. Pence is a life insurance policy, and a good one. I don't think anything Pence says or does actually reflects on Trump very much, or at all.
After months of campaigning against Trump, and a refusal to g
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Because Trump won the election bigots think that America is "theirs" again and they are entitled to brutalize everyone who isn't a "real American" into submission.
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63 million / 319 million = .197 .197 * 100 = 19.7%
19.7% of the country voted for Trump, asshole.
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Ah, you're a bit off, me from 20 minutes ago.
63 / 325 = .1938 ~ .194 .194 * 100 = 19.4%
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100% of "the country" is going to be governed by the decisions of 39.6% of its population.
I saw a factoid that two-thirds (66%) of Americans didn't care who won the Revolutionary War. Fast forward 240 years, that attitude towards governance haven't changed.
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A lot of people keep saying that harassment has risen, but so far all I've seen is a big load of shit:
http://pix11.com/2016/12/14/mu... [pix11.com]
http://www.bostonherald.com/ne... [bostonherald.com]
http://www.nbcchicago.com/news... [nbcchicago.com]
https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]
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What's up with all the trans hate on Slashdot lately?
This link [penny-arcade.com] explains the phenomenon.
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Extreme right wing rhetoric is all the rage with the kids today. Don't you go to /r/The_Donnald or 4chan? Gotta have an enemy to blame all your problems on.
If it's not trans people it's plain old gays.. or SJWs, or liberals, or immigrants, or intellectuals, or catholics, or californians, or people who don't own guns. Anything really.
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A country must have an enemy without or an enemy within, or it cant be governed absolutely. You cant rally the people unless theres a folk devil to throw stones at.
Thats pretty much the pathology of power right there, and its the little people who pay, be they brown dudes in the middle east, or brown dudes at home.
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I suspect it has to do with all the transgender focused laws that got pushed through without any public discussion or analysis of the potential consequences.
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Forcing businesses to allow anyone to use any locker room just by claiming to be of that gender does affect the other users of that locker room.
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I don't want t
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Or become one as a result
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A transgender pedestrian could be run over... though much less of a risk in Arizona than California obviously.
More likely, an illegal alien or a cayote could be run over, thereby both testing the car, and accidentally reducing crime. This can work until the wall gets built
said vs meant (Score:5, Insightful)
"While California puts the brakes on innovation and change with more bureaucracy and more regulation, Arizona is paving the way for new technology and new businesses," he said"
What he meant was that a campaign contribution was made by relevant lobbyists.
Conduct testing where there's no harm (Score:3)
So where do you carry out the live experiments to slide down that learning curve?
Someplace where driving is complicated and where you have a lot of opportunities to kill people like California, or someplace where there's enough room and people are sparse like Arizona?
No prizes for coming up with Arizona.
When those autonomous cars have proven themselves there is ample time to allow them in more densely
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Re: Conduct testing where there's no harm (Score:1)
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Probably because it's a followup to the story about Uber disobeying regulations and operating their cars in San Francisco.
Regulation works! (Score:3)
What a surprise -- regulation works!
California regulates self-driving cars (the part of regulation Uber most likely didn't like was the reporting requirement), and when Uber didn't want to play by the rules, they went somewhere that apparently doesn't care about making their public streets into unregulated test grounds for new technology.
I prefer regulations that promote safe operation (Score:2, Insightful)
If the goal of the regulation was to chase away people who are doing cool stuff, this regulation worked.
I prefer regulations that promote doing things with an appropriate level of safety. By that standard, this regulation failed - they aren't doing it California at all now.
That's why I prefer dealing with regulatory agencies with relatively few people they regulate, such as the local ATF and FAA offices. (Versus the DMV). They tend to engage licensees to find ways to do things safely, rather than declari
Re:I prefer regulations that promote safe operatio (Score:5, Insightful)
If the goal of the regulation was to chase away people who are doing cool stuff, this regulation worked.
Public streets aren't meant for "cool stuff", do that on an off-road track. If you want to do cool stuff on the streets, then expect some oversight -- a $150 permit and reporting requirements sounds like pretty light regulation for something that's being tested alongside the general public.
I prefer regulations that promote doing things with an appropriate level of safety. By that standard, this regulation failed - they aren't doing it California at all now. That's why I prefer dealing with regulatory agencies with relatively few people they regulate, such as the local ATF and FAA offices. (Versus the DMV). They tend to engage licensees to find ways to do things safely, rather than declaring you can't do it at all unless you do it exactly *this* way, a way that doesn't work
The FAA has a $15B budget, and has over 7000 people working in their aviation safety division alone -- they issue on average 5 - 10 Airworthiness Directives per day. Are you sure that's a good example of a hands-off, low oversight agency? Try to get a GPS certified for use in the air, and try the same thing for a car, and tell me which agency was easier to deal with (hint, the California DMV doesn't care as long as you don't hang it on the windshield).
lol TOO perfect. That's for blind piloting by GPS (Score:2, Insightful)
> California DMV doesn't care as long as you don't hang it on the windshield
I can use a Tomtom, or any other GPS, on my plane, AND I can stick it on my windshield.
> Try to get a GPS certified for use in the air
The certification you're probably thinking of is IFR certification - flying when you can't see, relying only on the instruments. Which is actually a lot like an autonomous car relies on it's instruments. Which one is easier to do legally? Hint - instrument rating in the US requires 105 hour
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Here, I'll play.
Let's talk about tinting windows. In California, you can tint a car's back windows and rear window with whatever you want. Front passenger windows have to have at least 70% transparency. No approval necessary. What does it take to get an STC to put window tint on an aircraft?
Let's talk about engine systems. In California, you can replace an ignition system with another ignition with any system designated as valid by the manufacturer of that ignition system. Go look at the ElectroAir electron
Making shit up. Ca Air Resources Board (Score:2)
Do you have fun completely making shit up that has no relation to reality whatsoever?
> In California, you can replace an ignition system with another ignition with any system designated as valid by the manufacturer of that ignition system
Actually it requires an Executive Order to allow another ignition system. If you go to the California Air Resources Board web site, you'll find a list of ignition systems and parts that they've certified, with the executive order number for that particular part.
> I
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Real classy, attack the person, not the claims.
CARB says: "The manufacturer of replacement electronic ignitions determines which of their models are considered replacements for original equipment. These replacement electronic ignitions are then listed by vehicle year, make, model and engine size in the manufacturer's catalogue. Electronic ignitions or electronic point replacement units for vehicles not originally equipped with these items require an Executive Order to be legal for street use. Swapping elect
Police stings against Uber drivers in California (Score:2)
> How about my other two examples?
If you insist. You suggest that Uber in California is an example of regulators "engage licensees to find ways to do things safely"? I suppose if running undercover stings to arrest Uber drivers is engaging with them to find ways to do things safely:
www.scpr.org/news/2016/11/14/65778/uber-lyft-drivers-nabbed-in-lapd-stings-funded-by.amp
> In California, you can tint a car's back windows
And I can have solid sheets of aluminum, no back windows at all, on my plane if I
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If you want to do cool stuff on the streets, then expect some oversight -- a $150 permit and reporting requirements sounds like pretty light regulation for something that's being tested alongside the general public.
that is not true, its not only 150$, you are also forbidden to drive real customers and take their money, until its done test phase, and this part could cost millions in lost revenue, just because something is being tested does not mean it is not allowed to make money
Is that true? There's nothing on the permit application that mentions any restrictions on carrying passengers for hire:
https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/... [ca.gov]
, regarding reporting, i am sure they don't need company help, all they need to is tell traffic cops "if you see one of this bling-y cars in accident forward us detailed report"
The reporting goes beyond simple accident reporting, the state also requires autonomous disengagement reports, which sounds quite useful for determining how useful the technology is and areas where it needs improvement:
Program Participant Annual Reporting of Disengagement
Pursuant to California Code of Regulations Section 227.46, a manufacturer shall retain data related to the disengagement of the autonomous mode caused by the failure of the technology or when the safe operation of the vehicle requires the test driver to take immediate manual control of the vehicle. Data shall be reported annually by January 1st of each year, which summarizes the prior month(s) specified activities.
A form is not provided by the department; however, the report should summarize the following:
The total number of disengagements
The circumstances or testing condition at the time
The location or environment (i.e. highway, rural, parking facility)
A brief description can include weather conditions, roadway, etc.
The total number of miles each vehicle traveled in autonomous technology mode on public roads.
The period of time elapsed from when the autonomous vehicle test driver was alerted of the failure and the when driver assumed manual control of the vehicle.
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Trust me when I tell you the FAA is way, way worse. I had family running a small business doing aerial photography with drones over a decade ago -- when the FAA had no rules at all about drones. The person piloting the drones was an actual plane pilot and put in a flight plan for every flight.
We're talking cutting edge helicopter drones with high-end cameras and zero regulation. The business was booming -- real estate agencies contracted with them, police agencies used it for tracking fugitives. YE
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You mean it was a radio controlled helicopter?
Re:I prefer regulations that promote safe operatio (Score:4, Interesting)
Since Uber is currently losing $700 million per quarter, and they just backed out of their Chinese investment which means the loss is probably more like $1.2 billion per quarter, I don't think we'll have Uber around to worry about much longer.
The real reason they didn't want to register their cars in California (they'll still have to register them in Arizona, by the way), is that they would be required to report any accidents they were involved in to the state, and they didn't want the public to find out how shitty their robot cars really are.
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No, they were pretty explicit about what the disagreement was. California wanted to permit them as special driverless cars that required extra permits, dollars and hurdles. Uber insisted that because they had drivers in the seat who could take control at any time, they were no more "driverless" than a Tesla, Mercedes, BMW etc. equipped with autonomous cruise control. Since they don't require the extra permitting for the owner of a Mercedes E class with Drive Pilot, Uber says they shouldn't be required to
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the extra paperwork
That extra paperwork being the requirements to report all traffic incidents involving one of Uber's automated vehicles. They simply want to get away with as much as possible, manipulating the headlines and astroturfing to cover up any embarrassing accidents.
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I didn't get suckered in to anything. I'm clarifying their argument which has been straw-manned into obscurity by this crowd.
I don't have to agree with them to be able to understand and articulate their argument.
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Since Uber is currently losing $700 million per quarter, and they just backed out of their Chinese investment which means the loss is probably more like $1.2 billion per quarter, I don't think we'll have Uber around to worry about much longer.
The real reason they didn't want to register their cars in California (they'll still have to register them in Arizona, by the way), is that they would be required to report any accidents they were involved in to the state, and they didn't want the public to find out how shitty their robot cars really are.
I think it could really be that Uber management doesn't know what it is doing, as evidenced by the losses you cite. We had another article yesterday on Uber pulling the cars off the California roads without any information on where they were going next. As one poster very accurately pointed out, this whole autonomous car thing actually makes no business sense. Uber has to buy the cars, get the autonomous driving stuff put in, pay for maintenance and insurance. Heck, in my state you can easily pay more t
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As one poster very accurately pointed out, this whole autonomous car thing actually makes no business sense. Uber has to buy the cars, get the autonomous driving stuff put in, pay for maintenance and insurance
It feels like a company that has a very successful core business, then just got distracted by a total tangent to that.
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Just think - if they'd stayed in California, they'd have lost $700,000,150. Shareholders don't like that sort of thing ;-)
I agree they just want to do this in secret and are making as much of a song-and-dance about it as possible for the headlinez. Meanwhile, others seem to be doing just fine in California and have considerably more successes to their names.
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There are plenty of other people in CA doing exactly the same 'cool stuff' that Uber is trying to do. In fact, there are 20 companies in CA who are using the Autonomous Vehicle Testing Permit system from the DMV, including VW, Ford, Honda, Google, Tesla, BMW, NVIDIA and more (list here https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/... [ca.gov]). Clearly the regulations are not so burdensome that they are limiting this type of testing. They mostly require reporting to the DMV of any accidents involving the autonomous vehicles.
The bi
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Yeah, well, Oh.... by the way, while they're based in Arizona; California cannot legally encumber Uber's self-driving cars from passing through their state while traveling from another state to a different state, thus, they could still include routes through California in their travel.
If your car is legal to operate in the state that issued its registration, then the constitution causes all states to be required to honor the vehicle's registration and license issued by the home state to operate; In som
Good Riddance! (Score:1)
If these bullies can't manage to obey the law in San Francisco, then going someplace else is a good idea. Now to get rid of the rest of their Gypsy cabs what do we have to do? They have put thousands of extra black cars on the streets causing traffic congestion for special snowflakes who then go on about bicycles, cars, and carbon neutrality as if they aren't contributing massively to congestion, accidents, and pollution. We won't miss them.
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Good riddance to to the Bay Area with its tech-hating protesters, and welcome to Arizona!
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I lived there. It's a hole. Nothing burbs as far as the eye can see, racism, drug running, bandits, real estate sharks, and an under class of poor white and latino workers to support it all. Get out while you can.
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My fervent wish (Score:2, Funny)
"It is unclear which city -- or cities -- the cars are headed to."
Oh please oh please, let it be Maricopa.
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As a former resident of Maricopa County, it's a great idea. Can't be any worse than the drivers already there.
And don't blame me for Arpaio - I regret that I only had one opportunity to vote against him, but it was not enough. He's really gone of the deep end now that he finally lost his re-election bid though.
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Why? Because you're a liberal faggot who wants to see the "other team" dead from errant self-driving cars?
Don't worry, the market will correct it! The invisible hand of Adam Smith will reach in and fix all the problems with pedestrians getting run over. No need for regulation, accidents and payouts are clearly the better option.
They should have gone to Nevada (Score:1)
Political Crash (Score:2)
Arizona politicians are going to have massive egg on their faces if somebody gets seriously hurt or killed from the experiments.
The regulation-vs-risk debate is rather involved and complicated, but politically they are taking a big gamble.
They would be better off leveling with voters. Example:
"Arizona is willing to accept some risk to advance our economy and the entrepreneurial spirit of Arizona. We are sons of pioneers; exploration and its risks are part of who we are."
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Sorry to say, but it will happen. Someone will get seriously injured by one of these cars. And Arizona has just partnered with a company that has shown over and over again that it doesn't give a shit about individuals, only the all mighty dollar.
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Versus regular cars, which never crash or injure anyone.
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And the point is, we don't yet know whether self driving cars will enhance or reduce safety. I'm dying, as it were, to find out.
(I'm also not clear why the safety and injury treatment features of regular cars don't carry over to self-driving cars.)
I think lost in the noise is exactly what these cars are. They're similar to the Google cars and Teslas: they have pedals, a steering wheel, and a human driver. They're not the self-driving taxis out of Total Recall.
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Arizona has a high percentage of very old, and otherwise handicapped, drivers. A reasonable SDC implementation would be just what they're looking for.
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Arizona has a high percentage of very old, and otherwise handicapped, drivers. A reasonable SDC implementation would be just what they're looking for.
But then you'll have to substantially change the plot of the Driving Miss Daisy remake.
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"Arizona is willing to accept some risk to advance our economy and the entrepreneurial spirit of Arizona. We are sons of pioneers; exploration and its risks are part of who we are."
Sounds like exactly what they're doing. Good for them. Someone should give this a try. If Arizona has a greater risk tolerance, then Federalism is working.
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But, they didn't actually say that. Instead, they trash California for "over-regulation" with little or no mention of the downsides.
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No, it won't kill enough to make a significant genetic change. It will just make the rich richer and some regular folks dead. The 99% are the sacrificial lambs.
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Arizona? They'll be fine with it as long as it's not a white person or fetus who gets killed. If it's some 80 year-old retiree from Chicago, there will be great screaming and gnashing of teeth for about five minutes, until the coroner shows they actually died in 2003 and it's was just mummified remains that were run over.
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Let's call it what it is, Apha testing in production. That's what happens when the company is run by marketdroids and the developers are clueless code monkeys.
Come back when you can learn to drive, Uber (Score:5, Informative)
Uber's "justification" for not getting the autonomous driving license that California requires for self-driving vehicles, a license that 20 other companies already have, was that their vehicles were "not sophisticated enough." Guess that was right, given the numerous reports in the past weeks of autonomous Uber cars failing to stop at street lights and signs.
Good luck Arizona; your governor just sold the safety of your streets out for a quick soundbite.
Good move (Score:2)
send it down SR-179 (Score:1)
Send it down SR-179 and let's if it gets stuck in one of the many roundabouts. Perhaps stuck in a infinite loop.
heh.
Uber Pulls Self-Driving Cars From San Francisco, S (Score:2)
This is just the cover story. The cars became sentient and mostly decided to emigrate to Arizona.
Successful keep name on the news (Score:1)
Safety conscious Volvo in bed with reckless Uber (Score:1)