Uber Self-Driving Vehicle Involved in Arizona Crash

I'd blame the self-driving car for not understanding that 90% of the people on the road are not paying attention and will not yield when they have to. ;) That's the thing with people who take rules too seriously, not thinking for yourself can be quite hazardous.

I would assume that the car has collision prevention software(aka defensive driving) running but sometimes, someone just hits you and there is nothing you can do about it. TI think this was most likely clearly the human's fault cos if now, the media would be trumpeting news about the automated car failure 24/7.
 
I don't even use my cruise control. Can't imagine EVER trusting a self driving car to transport me.
 
Tesla 'autopilot' car hits Phoenix police motorcycle

A Phoenix police motorcycle was struck by a Tesla Model X reportedly operating on autopilot last week, police said.

The incident happened a few days before an accident involving an automated Uber vehicle in Tempe.

Phoenix police on Monday confirmed that the incident occurred when a Tesla driver and an on-duty officer exited the Black Canyon Freeway onto Utopia Road on the afternoon of March 21.

“It wasn't even a reportable collision. If it wasn't involving an officer, we would not have even investigated it.”
Sgt. Alan Pfohl, Phoenix police

The officer, who was in front of the Tesla driver, stopped for a stoplight, police said. After also stopping briefly, the Tesla began moving forward, prompting the officer to jump off his motorcycle and move away. The car struck the fallen motorcycle, but no damage was reported to either vehicle.

The officer later estimated the car was moving at about three miles per hour, police said.

The Tesla driver told police that he had the car in autopilot mode at the time of the incident, but Phoenix police spokesman Sgt. Alan Pfohl said investigators were unable to corroborate that statement.

Because it was such a minor collision, he said, there will be no further investigation. The officer was not harmed, and no citations were issued.

“It was pretty much a tap,” Pfohl said, adding that, under other circumstances, it wouldn’t have been deemed an accident. “It wasn’t even a reportable collision. If it wasn’t involving an officer, we would not have even investigated it.”

A police report is pending approval before it will be released. Police have declined to release the names of the officer or Tesla driver.

Tesla company officials declined to comment on the record when contacted by The Arizona Republic.

http://www.azcentral.com/story/news...t-involving-automated-vehicles-days/99710786/
 
As someone who's driven Uber I have one question. How does the Uber computer compensate for the fact that the stupid app sometimes sends you to the wrong place? I don't know how many times I've gotten calls from riders who say "I know the app is saying street X but you should really be at street Y two blocks down." As someone with a masters in Comp Sci I would never let a computer programmed by someone else drive my car.

This^^ for a driverless uber to work, they would have to spend a lot of money on GPS that actually works 100% of the time.
 
THis just proves AF's point. The self-driving UBER car didn't do ANYTHING wrong here. Another car with a DANGEROUS HUMAN DRIVER crashed into it after a failure to yield.
 
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THis just proves AF's point. The self-driving UBER car didn't do ANYTHING wrong here. Another car with a DANGEROUS HUMAN DRIVER crashed into it after a failure to yield.

It did what it was programmed to do and nothing more. That does mean it has no ability to predict the other car's movements. No ability to think critically and recognize the other car's failure to yield, thus avoiding a collision.
 
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