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#1
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
a human would not be able to figure out in 15 second whether it would be safer to crash into car A or car b An autonomous driving car however would be able to decide whether or not the people in car a will have a better survival rate.
Either way I would rather being driving my own vehicle, |
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#2
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
We need to come up with algorithm to find a way to crash into minimum number of cars...get the fluid dynamics from the rack!
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#3
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
In my driver's ed class, they said "always leave yourself an out". That said, something can conspire to remove that out (going through a construction zone where the shoulder is gone).
In addition to minimize damage to me, or to everyone. there is also: Let the vehicle that caused the problem bear the cost. For instance, if a tire blows out, and one of your choices is to hit that car, then hit that car. |
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#4
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
The article argues against itself. It makes the point that having a smart car would be unfair (especially the helmet thing; what's the correct answer there?) and says at the same time that having a random car would be undesirable. Obviously minimizing human fatalities is the priority, so what is it trying to say? That cars should make decisions based on... what? Basically it offers no solution to any problem and only seeks to stir people up.
That kind of "no solution" tone pisses me off more than pretty much anything else, regardless of situation. On another note, for once the comments (on the article) are good comments. Last edited by asid61 : 07-05-2014 at 00:06. |
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#5
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
People already make these types of decisions while driving.
Let's say you're driving at the speed limit through a residential neighborhood, and a child suddenly runs in front of your car to chase a ball. I'm sure most people would swerve to avoid the child even if it meant hitting another car or other inanimate object, because chances are at reasonable speeds no one in another car would be seriously injured but hitting a child would definitely result in serious injuries. |
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#6
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
Man I'd hate to be the guy who has to write an insurance policy clause for an autonomous vehicle collision. Who would be at fault...the car company...the programmer...the AI...
So many things to consider. |
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#7
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
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Look at Dubai, they currently employ an autonomous vehicle network where each car operates like a taxi, you go to a location, enter your destination, and a car picks you up and takes you there. There are many models that prove people do not need to own their own cars if the primary reason is transportation to and from places. Today 80% of a normal vehicles life is parked and the owner travels within a 50 mile radius of their home, to go to school, work, errands etc. Imagine how many resources we can save if we made less total vehicles, and made them available to more people, increasing their use time. Similar to an autonomous taxi service, that will pick you up and take you where you want to go. In cases like this, the service provider is responsible, similar to an airline company when the airline crashes. The autonomous car, affects every aspect of driving as we understand it today. It makes no sense to try to solve one off questions, while still thinking unilaterally about the topic. Driving needs major reform. There are many other models which yield drastically different results, but have benefits and shortcomings as well. Anytime someone talks about insurance with regards to an autonomous car the converstation will get derailed. Autonomous cars are being made to reduce accidenets and the loss of life and property damage among other things. These are all reasons why insurance companies exist. If those things don't happen or the likelyhood of that event occuring is reduced significantly, then consumer insurance companies can sease to exist altogether and commercial insurance companies take over. The way napster removed the need for record stores, autonomous cars can be the end of insurance for consumers... one additional benefit to atonomous cars, in addition to reduced traffic, smarter road construction, etc. Regards, Kevin Last edited by NotInControl : 07-05-2014 at 16:35. |
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#8
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
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#9
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
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The insurance aspect of an autonomous car depends on the model employed, and under most models they really don't differ much then say how a taxi company insures all of its cars or how an airline is insured. There are some models that do. The only reason I could deduce you were implying this was a hard task was the possible assumption that people still owned the vehicles. If this is not the case, I apologize. If people do not own the vehicles, then the model gets really simple, takes form of similar insurance models already instantiated today by other industries and it is not a hard task at all. If people do own the vehicles, then there're many more models which suggest how to handle this, and a lot more scenarios. The point I was trying to make is as people think of questions with regards to this technology, it is impossible to change one variable assuming everything else they currently understand about our driving model today stays the same. When autonomous cars are employed, every aspect of our driving model today will need to be modified as well. Regards, Kevin |
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#10
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
Assuming that attorneys are dealing with the insurance claim and not the actual policy clause itself, I would assume that the car manufacturer would be blamed in court. They have the biggest pockets
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#11
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
Well that was an incredibly misleading title.
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#12
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
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As for "then hit that car" - you surely mean "your best choice", not "one of your choices". (Every day, one of my choices is to hit that car in front of me. But my better choice is to brake gently beforehand instead...) Anyway, back to autonomous cars: Although arguable, insurance would just make the 'operator' of the car responsible (even if they weren't touching the controls). Putting responsibility on the manufacturer will guarantee we'll never see an autonomous car. That's like putting the responsibility for a cut hand on the knife manufacturer... |
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#13
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
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The change will come, though. Current beliefs about ownership, responsibility, and the proper role of government and whatnot will pretty clearly fall apart once most menial tasks are mechanized. |
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#14
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
The impact on insurance may depend on how autonomous cars are introduced. I heard a little while ago that even the corporations developing autonomous cars aren't planning on actually selling them anytime soon precisely because of fears about liability. So, if the cars are just sort of phased in without big changes, possibly via legislation, the designer/maker of the car would probably be responsible for any accidents that result.
However, autonomous cars shouldn't make "mistakes." So, if there is such an inescapable situation, someone (i.e. a person) probably did something dumb or you're in one of those "act of god" situations. In the first case, the person responsible would be liable, just like in a regular crash. In the case of something natural, like a rockfall or tree drop, why not hit the tree? I guess I'm not seeing a situation occurring where you have to hit another car and nobody did something wrong. For example, if it's raining, the autonomous cars ought to be able to slow down the appropriate amount to maintain control--robots don't get impatient. Last edited by Libraryfanatic : 08-05-2014 at 12:37. Reason: Silly me, I forgot about slip and slides |
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#15
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Re: What does everyone think ? Are the cars unethical?
They are being phased in as a safety measure. There are some cars already on the market that have automatic braking.
Once people are convinced that automatic systems can keep you from getting into an accident, then it does not take as much convincing to let them do the driving. After all, if they are bad drivers, at least they won't get into an accident. |
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