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New Federal guidelines on self-driving cars coming in July
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MacNN Staff
Join Date: Jul 2012
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The administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has told an industry conference in Detroit that new Federal government guidelines for self-driving, or autonomous, vehicles will be published in July, reports Fortune. According to NHTSA administrator Mark Rosekind, government legislation as it currently stands is moving too slowly in comparison with the speed of technological advancement in the field of developing autonomous vehicles. With a staggering 38,300 people killed on US roads last year, along with another 4.4 million injured in vehicle accidents, 92 percent of which are the result of driver error, autonomous vehicle technology stands to dramatically reduce these figures.
"[The industry] is on version 238.32 by the time we get regulations set out," Mark Rosekind said. As a consequence, regulations that remain unchanging "will not work for this area." "We will have something different in July," Rosekind added. For Rosekind, autonomous vehicle safety does not have to be perfect. "I'd say start at two times" better than regular cars he argues. Current fatality rates in the US, Rosekind said are the equivalent to "a 747 crashing every week for a year…it's unacceptable."
A BMW autonomous vehicle test bed
The NHTSA has previously argued that autonomous vehicles without steering wheels and gas pedals could be challenging to legislate, however it does not see too many hurdles in the way of introducing autonomous vehicles with controls that allow a person to override the system if required. To help accelerate the legislative process, Tesla has reportedly offered its data from its self-driving vehicle research, which Rosekind said the NHTSA would be happy to look at. Google, however, wants the states to uniformly comply with Federal guidelines. "We have seen 15 states propose such laws over the last 12 months," reads a Google statement on the subject.
Some of Tesla's current vehicles offer limited autonomous driving capabilities, while Google is continuing its research into fully autonomous vehicles, as is every other major auto manufacturer around the globe. While both Tesla and Google have experienced the rare on-road incident with their respective technologies, autonomous technology has the potential to eliminate human error, and thus the leading cause of the majority of car crashes on roads. Apple's "Project Titan" electric car project, which could hit the roads as soon as late 2019 or 2020, could feature autonomous technology as well.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2006
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Minority Report's self driving auto is coming closer.... "Siri, take me home, please. And read my text messages."
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Senior User
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Prince George, BC, Canada
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"... government legislation as it currently stands is moving too slowly in comparison with the speed of technological advancement ..."
Wow... amazing! Apparently these folks haven't watched any of the Tesla 'autonomous' mode videos, or noticed that Google's cars top out at 25 mph, and still drive like a drunken teen on their first day of driver's ed. Sheesh!
What hasn't been keeping up, is reality with the hype.
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