Uber's Self-Driving Cars Are Now Picking Up Passengers in Arizona (theverge.com) 122
Almost two months to the day after Uber loaded its fleet of self-driving SUVs into the trailer of a self-driving truck and stormed off to Arizona in a self-driving huff, the company is preparing to launch its second experiment (if you don't count the aborted San Francisco pilot) in autonomous ride-hailing. From a report on The Verge: What's different is that this time, Uber has the blessing from Arizona's top politician, Governor Doug Ducey, a Republican, who is expected to be "Rider Zero" on an autonomous trip along with Anthony Levandowski, VP of Uber's Advanced Technologies Group. [...] Starting today, residents of Tempe, Arizona, can hail a self-driving Volvo XC90 SUV on Uber's ride-sharing platform. All trips will include two Uber engineers in the front seats as safety drivers, in the event a human needs to take over control from the vehicle's software. Uber says it hopes to expand the coverage area to other cities in Arizona in the coming weeks.
the laws may take 3-5 years to get rid of drivers (Score:3)
the laws may take 3-5 years to get rid of drivers and it may take one jackpot payout accident to put a quick end to the auto drive system.
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Yes - that thing the human drivers of Uber don't have when they are working as Uber taxi drivers. It will be a step forward if Uber spends money on insurance for these things instead of cutting corners and imposing their costs on others.
Re:the laws may take 3-5 years to get rid of drive (Score:5, Informative)
I was just talking to an insurance agent the other day - State Farm at least has decided that they might as well make some money off this and are now offering a rideshare endorsement. Not sure how much extra it would be for your average Uber driver.
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The "uber" was not already going in that direction so the ride is not being shared. It is very deliberately a confusing falsehood so that the Uber taxi company can evade regulations, taxation and employment laws. So much time is wasted on arguing about what the hell they mean and in that time they have done what they want no matter what the
Re:the laws may take 3-5 years to get rid of drive (Score:4, Informative)
Yes - that thing the human drivers of Uber don't have when they are working as Uber taxi drivers.
That's not strictly true, since Uber insures them while they have a fare. The only time they aren't covered is while they are on their way to pick up a fare.
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That makes my point for me. They would not be going to pick up that fare if the Uber dispatch service did not tell them to do so. Other taxi companies cover their drivers the entire time that they are working for them.
It's 19th century piecework with an app.
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Yes - that thing the human drivers of Uber don't have when they are working as Uber taxi drivers.
That's not strictly true, since Uber insures them while they have a fare. The only time they aren't covered is while they are on their way to pick up a fare.
Which is part of the problem. Away from Planet Uber, if your journey is undertaken for work purposes (which going to meet a customer clearly is) you are "at work", and should be covered by work-related insurance. That's why regular taxi drivers have to have commercial insurance; private car insurance doesn't cover operating as a driver-for-hire.
The fun part is that, despite the all the penny-pinching (and the hype), Uber is hemorrhaging money [techcrunch.com].
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Which is part of the problem. Away from Planet Uber, if your journey is undertaken for work purposes (which going to meet a customer clearly is) you are "at work", and should be covered by work-related insurance. That's why regular taxi drivers have to have commercial insurance; private car insurance doesn't cover operating as a driver-for-hire.
I've heard this argument before, but for me it doesn't wash specifically because the secret formula used to determine how much you will pay for auto insurance includes a location component and a mileage component. If you're putting on more miles, and they know you live in an urban area, they can just price your insurance payments to account for your use of the vehicle. The only time you really need more coverage than they ordinarily provide is when you are transporting a fare. They shouldn't be allowed to d
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It's as if the Scientologists decided to run taxis.
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In Australia for example they have not paid tax since setting up and a raid by the tax office resulted in no employee information since that is apparently all in Holland.
Sounds like they really think they're clever. Like I said, scumbuckets. However, they are fighting to change laws I want changed, and I like that about them. I also think they're going to be made irrelevant by competition and/or driven out of business for their illegal actions.
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That is a side effect of their utter contempt for anything other than making money by cutting as many corners as possible and their customers and staff be damned.
Government protected monopolies have sucked since King John used it as a way to raise extra cash (and most likely earlier) but Uber are not really fighting against that stuff, they are quite happy to bribe their way around it and still leave those laws in place to impact on everyone else.
How
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Sadly, in many real, violent situations, you may not have the time or ability to draw your weapon and use it effectively. If you are in a situation where you can, then a gun is definitely is a fantastic equalizer. If otoh, your wife/husband/son/daughter/boyfriend/girlfriend gets very angry and in a fit uses the gun on you, then, there too it will be very effective. There's also the cases when your toddler or young child pulls the gun out of your purse at the Walmart and quickly and surprisingly ends your
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I totally want a car that drops me off at the store entrance then goes off to negotiate parking or picks up some passengers and makes us some money on the side while I am shopping.
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Horses and buggies were driven by humans too.
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Yeah, because those uber cars totally freak out when they hear a gunshot or someone slaps their rear quarter-panel galloping off in a blind panic.
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Really? Their "self driving" cars apparently need two engineers in them in case anything goes wrong. This whole thing is bullshit so that Uber can scam even more money from their investors to feed their $2billion/ year losses.
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Really? Their "self driving" cars apparently need two engineers in them in case anything goes wrong.
Google seems to do the same thing with no non-employee passengers at all. I live in Phoenix (specifically, a region called Ahwatukee, which borders Tempe) and I see Google's self-driving cars periodically around here with not less than two but sometimes three people in them.
I don't think it's an "in case anything goes wrong" (they only need one for that) so much as it is a "let's have more than one set of eyes to make notes of what goes wrong so we can update the software later," with the person in the driv
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So essentially test rides with passengers (Score:5, Interesting)
All trips will include two Uber engineers in the front seats as safety drivers
Google has also done this several times as a PR stunt without the taxi fare, they let a legally blind man ride with them back in 2012. I would imagine the fare is pretty irrelevant anyway when you have an expensive test vehicle and two engineers to pay. So what's really new here that hasn't already been done 5 years ago? Is there any reason to believe that in 5 years it'll be any different? I understand it's difficult, but I'm getting tired of the hype that self-driving cars are right around the corner. Two safety drivers on every ride isn't exactly self-driving. Any bets on when you can actually get into the back of a self-driving car with no helpers, no license and have the car drive? I'm starting to guess 2030+ while like totally being just "a few years out" all the way...
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I'm getting tired of the hype that self-driving cars are right around the corner.
They ARE right around the corner. But the corner is years down the road.
Re: So essentially test rides with passengers (Score:5, Interesting)
I happen to both like driving AND like the option of having the car take over if I'm tired etc.
Cars are a unique instrument because of the degree of freedom they provide. My big concern is that the advent of self-driving cars will be used by the state to heavily infringe on those freedoms.
My sense is that within months of approval of this technology for mass market use, it will become mandatory, and within a few years after that havens of the nanny state will prohibit humans from driving.
All in the name of public safety of course. The cars will be monitored, tracked, and subject to stop on order from advice at any time.
Tell me this isn't the future.
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Camera-based traffic enforcement is sort of the opposite of market forces,
Whilst it's not market based, its not the opposite.
I'd hate to think how bad market based enforcement would be, not only would they be required to make a profit, they'd be required to charge us as much as they could get away with as often as possible. Here in the UK you can get a maximum of 4 speeding fines over a 3 year period before its a holiday off the road, they are also pretty lenient with the speeding fines too compared to Australia (I.E. doing 55 in a 50 zone wont get you nicked, even 60 would be ig
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My point was not to argue *for* a market system. I was just saying that what the government chooses to do is not the market.
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They don't need to outlaw human drivers. If self-driving, hailable vehicles become widespread, far fewer people (vanishingly few?) will bother owning cars themselves - at least in locations well served by the Ubers. Why deal with expense, maintenence, insurance, parking, etc. once you can have a more convenient experience hailing a robot? Especially if competition brings the price of hailing a robot down.
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Google has also done this several times as a PR stunt without the taxi fare, they let a legally blind man ride with them back in 2012. ..... So what's really new here that hasn't already been done 5 years ago?
They are charging the rider for it?
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Can Uber really make money at this? (Score:2)
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There will be a point where it will be cheaper to just run "one" driver, replicated millions of times, instead of paying millions of drivers, yes. It might not be today, but eventually the two lines on the cost chart will cross.
As for maintenance on the cars, I expect Uber to wait until this technology is in most cars, and then they'll still "borrow" your car, so that you'll still be responsible for insuring, maintaining, etc. You'll just get a vastly reduced rate than Uber drivers do today, since Uber jus
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Also, selling self driving cars to people is the end game. Getting them on the road as taxis is a stepping point to get public trust. Volvo might be selling Uber on a plan that exists briefly between public mistrust of the tech, and cities using self driving cars the way bike sharing works now.
Uber is planning on selling its platform as the road tested solution to hailing digitally, regardless of who owns the cars. So at worst it advertises the product, for which uber provides the service. If they own a fle
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Why would you want to own a self-driving car if self-driving taxis make the experience of hailing one comparable? Unless you actually like driving (I do), looking for parking (I don't), taking the thing in for service and fill-ups (nobody does), and paying for insurance (anybody?).
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I think you have this backwards. I admit I'm only one data point. BTW, I have never used Uber/Lyft, and have only been in a taxi once in my life AFAIK (maybe I was when I was too young to remember).
I will gladly give up my car if/when I can get cheap driverless Uber.. i.e. point to point transportation NOW (or very very close to it).
If the cost over a year is less than tha
they will sub out the cars so the rider is the ren (Score:2)
they will sub out the cars so the rider is the renter and uber get's out of needing any insuring and if the car crashes then the renter get's hit with lot's of junk fees.
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If you hypothesize that robot drivers can really do the job sufficiently well, the conclusion is an extremely strong and obvious yes. Taxis, limo services, etc are already viable business models even when you have all those same expenses plus a driver to pay. Remove the driver expense and it only gets more viable.
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if I owned a self driving car, and *if it were profitable for me*, I'd willingly put it to work at times when I wasn't working ... kinda makes me wonder:
1) how do self driving cars, refill or recharge themselves?
2) what happens when my car breaks down in the middle of the road? How does it pay for the tow ?
1. This is a good question, maybe we'll go back to gas stations employing attendants rather than just cashiers? I could see charging being automated very easily if the plug location and shape were standardized, similarly for gas?
2. It contacts your AAA which is now tied to your car as well as your person and gets a tow, maybe it texts you for specific instructions if it hasn't got viable options programmed in already. AAA doesn't charge for tow destinations within a certain radius.
Except... (Score:2)
"stormed off to Arizona in a huff"??? (Score:2)
California revoked their registrations and banned them. If that was a ploy by CDMV to get them to pay the appropriate bribes for access it certainly backfired. Otherwise, the CA got exactly what it wanted.
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What Uber did is like registering your fleet of semis as non-commercial vehicles and then whining and complaining that that broke the rules.
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I'm pretty sure the "bribes" you're talking about are a $150 fee for the first 10 test vehicles and $50 for each additional 10 test vehicles.
Yeah, that's it. Far less than it cost to ship the cars to Arizona, and far less than the administrative costs of the program.
Boy, Uber sure came out ahead on that one.
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I'm sure the test engineers are pretty pissed off that they end up in the shit-hole that Arizona is rather than the land of milk and honey they could have been in.
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hey there! Keep both hands above the desk please
I hope the cars are less moody than the truck... (Score:1)
self-driving truck and stormed off to Arizona in a self-driving huff,
Do the cars that pick up the people also storm off in a huff? It would be funny if they also call the passengers "meatbags" and tell them to "bite my shiny metal ass"
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self-driving truck and stormed off to Arizona in a self-driving huff,
Do the cars that pick up the people also storm off in a huff? It would be funny if they also call the passengers "meatbags" and tell them to "bite my shiny metal ass"
Surely they can do better than huffs [youtube.com]. They've gotta be hell in Phoenix during summer:
Will people like self driving cars? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now throw into this mixture a fleet of cars, strictly obeying speed limits, preferring to slow down rather than speed up on yellow, refuse to use free right turns, coming to full stops on grade crossings... A few Access vans, school buses and trucks doing this itself annoys people stuck behind them in traffic. Now suddenly a large fleet of vehicles with a spinning dome on the head ....
Also, in the game of chicken, the winning strategy is to appear be irrational. Break your steering wheel and throw it away in full view of the competitor, "I can't swerve, even if I want to, your move buddy!". All these cars are known to rational decision makers. They will be gamed like nobody's business. People will dangerously cut infront of them, be very rude to them, after all they are machines, no hard feeling. And every time the self driving car will slow down, yield, and let the barbarians get away with it.
In isolated test cases, in small numbers they will work. But large number of them interacting with large number of normal people, they will be forever stuck on the highway ramp or left turn yield on green locations.
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Basically no one obeys speed limits. The posted speed limits are at best suggestions, and at worst revenue generators for the local governments. And many other traffic rules are casually disobeyed. Except for the stop sign, I don't see much voluntary compliance of traffic law.
This is more indicative of your area than the general way people behave on the roads. Also calling it a revenue generator is a bit extreme. Paying a fine for something completely within your control makes this a 100% voluntary gesture.
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Basically no one obeys speed limits. The posted speed limits are at best suggestions, and at worst revenue generators for the local governments. And many other traffic rules are casually disobeyed. Except for the stop sign, I don't see much voluntary compliance of traffic law.
This is more indicative of your area than the general way people behave on the roads. Also calling it a revenue generator is a bit extreme. Paying a fine for something completely within your control makes this a 100% voluntary gesture.
How about paying a fine for obeying the law? Where I am, police pull people over and give tickets for laws they did not break and the magistrate judges do not care and why should they? The fines pay the cities and them.
another view... (Score:2)
I am not really in favor of these cars, but consider this counter argument.
I have a 17 mile commute to work. The divided 2 and 3 lane highway is a mile from my house, and my office is right off the exit. So it is effectively all highway miles. I can usually make it in 20-23 minutes. Most of the trip is a 60MPH speed limit. Traffic is normally 70-75 MPH, with a few others on the margin of that. Pretty much what you stated.
But why does it take me 20+ minutes to get to work? Because when we aren't going
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The starkest effect is seen in flights between India and USA. Most passengers would patiently wait their "zone" to be called while boarding in USA to fly to India. Almost the very same set of passengers would be lining up in Delhi or Mumbai
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or maybe the self-driving cars will have a mellowing effect. There will be such a large amount of them that the new normal will become to drive at or below the speed limit. Studies have shown that humans tend to follow what is believed to be normal behavior and this is established by what the current behavior is (yeah, a bit circular). For example, in Norway (I believe) convicted felons are permitted to vote and in fact, vote before the general population, this is seen as normal. In the USA, convicted f
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If you can drive at 60 MPH in the snow, the snow was not heavy and clearly the roads were safe enough to barrel down. I strongly doubt many opted out in such mild weather.
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Exactly. And it isn't like the roads were unoccupied, there were roughly just as many cars as normal.
Also, I have driven it on clear days where there is much less traffic - like Presidents Day or other holidays during the week that not everyone gets off. And the traffic patterns are the same.
There's always 2 or 3 people who need to go 10 mph faster than everyone else. I can be going 75 (15 over the limit, btw) in the left lane, with a series of cars in front of me, and some jackass will come flying up be
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Yeah, I completely agree too that with automated driving, everything would go smoother, cars would be flowed in and out nicely, all would brake in unison, like a big multitrack train. Linked by sensors and information rather than mechanisms. We could even work on the commute and count that as work time. Or learn stuff, or nap, shave, have breakfast, exercise...
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And still... I don't want one.
I am a gear-head, and I don't think I could ever get away from that. Electric vehicles don't interest me much, even though some are amazing from a performance perspective. I think it would take a very long time to replace what we have now anyway. I think it will happen, but hopefully not completely. I am all for progress, and I think that the leaps that technology have made in the automotive industry are pretty incredible. Just don't take away our rich automotive history b
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That's fine, I'm sure there are others like you, but your tastes won't last past your generation and then the non-driving, non-polluting, accident-free human race will continue.
Even if it gets outlawed, I'm sure that good enough simulators could be built that would surpass the real life driving experience you are accustomed to. Supercars, high-performance muscle cars that you can push to their edge and even past, because it's all software and haptic hardware. If what you enjoy is turning wrenches, then yo
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So kewl! Maybe they can also arrange fines for those morons who litter from their car, I'm looking at you inconsiderate bastard smokers...
Wild West (Score:1)
Hop aboard the Dereg Express!
Johnny Cab (Score:1)
2 Uber engineers in the front seats (Score:2)
Steal underpants --> profit...
Somethings amiss at the Circle K
The tears ... (Score:2)
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You are one kinky bastard!
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Mexico -it its part of Trump's crackdown on illegals