Usually when people die in airplane accidents, they took the risk of flying. What I am talking about is not people driving an AV being at risk - I'm talking about incidents where an innocent by-stander, a pedestrian, a fellow motorist is killed or tragically injured.roon wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 19:56The expectation is for it to be safer. That is a prudent assumption for any inherently conservative large enterprise. Consider that airline crashes rarely end corporations. They will be aiming for airline levels of incident rates. Tesla will offer their own insurance for this reason. Reduced average incidents rate will offset mortality rate, which should be reduced as well. Cheap insurance that can still pay off the large incidents. Tesla have weathered all the fire and explosion press. Sensationalism hasn't detered them. Same will apply to autonomy.Phil wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 08:13Just wait till the first people are killed in accidents and the discussions will inevitably reach another level about responsibility, liability, collateral damage etc. it’s one thing to hold another human responsible for a mistake, but entirely something else to hold a coorporation, software, machine responsible for the same. And it will come. Just wait until more of these things start driving around without supervision and entirely in the hands of customers.
The plane, or wreckage still falls where it will. There is a town in Scotland called lockerbie, and I an sure many more.Phil wrote: ↑27 Apr 2019, 14:20Usually when people die in airplane accidents, they took the risk of flying. What I am talking about is not people driving an AV being at risk - I'm talking about incidents where an innocent by-stander, a pedestrian, a fellow motorist is killed or tragically injured.roon wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 19:56The expectation is for it to be safer. That is a prudent assumption for any inherently conservative large enterprise. Consider that airline crashes rarely end corporations. They will be aiming for airline levels of incident rates. Tesla will offer their own insurance for this reason. Reduced average incidents rate will offset mortality rate, which should be reduced as well. Cheap insurance that can still pay off the large incidents. Tesla have weathered all the fire and explosion press. Sensationalism hasn't detered them. Same will apply to autonomy.Phil wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 08:13Just wait till the first people are killed in accidents and the discussions will inevitably reach another level about responsibility, liability, collateral damage etc. it’s one thing to hold another human responsible for a mistake, but entirely something else to hold a coorporation, software, machine responsible for the same. And it will come. Just wait until more of these things start driving around without supervision and entirely in the hands of customers.
And most airplane crashes are indeed due to human error or extra ordinary circumstances. Planes are also not autonomous. There's a pilot in there for a job and for every eventuality. Do not compare this to an autonomous vehicle driving on roads with thousands of unpredictable factors. Flying a plane in an (relatively) empty sky is a piece of cake in comparison compared to the amount of processing power that is required to deal with driving on a road with an unpredictability waiting to happen every second.
Not trying to compare the operations or parameters of the two, merely saying airline incident rates or similar is the goal for AVs i.e. low rates generally i.e. safety. Substitute any low frequency occurence for airlines in my previous post.Phil wrote: ↑27 Apr 2019, 14:20Usually when people die in airplane accidents, they took the risk of flying. What I am talking about is not people driving an AV being at risk - I'm talking about incidents where an innocent by-stander, a pedestrian, a fellow motorist is killed or tragically injured.roon wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 19:56The expectation is for it to be safer. That is a prudent assumption for any inherently conservative large enterprise. Consider that airline crashes rarely end corporations. They will be aiming for airline levels of incident rates. Tesla will offer their own insurance for this reason. Reduced average incidents rate will offset mortality rate, which should be reduced as well. Cheap insurance that can still pay off the large incidents. Tesla have weathered all the fire and explosion press. Sensationalism hasn't detered them. Same will apply to autonomy.Phil wrote: ↑26 Apr 2019, 08:13Just wait till the first people are killed in accidents and the discussions will inevitably reach another level about responsibility, liability, collateral damage etc. it’s one thing to hold another human responsible for a mistake, but entirely something else to hold a coorporation, software, machine responsible for the same. And it will come. Just wait until more of these things start driving around without supervision and entirely in the hands of customers.
And most airplane crashes are indeed due to human error or extra ordinary circumstances. Planes are also not autonomous. There's a pilot in there for a job and for every eventuality. Do not compare this to an autonomous vehicle driving on roads with thousands of unpredictable factors. Flying a plane in an (relatively) empty sky is a piece of cake in comparison compared to the amount of processing power that is required to deal with driving on a road with an unpredictability waiting to happen every second.
The insurance companies would, they would have to.
Hence statistics and probability. Planes fly in the sky, in designated air routes. At the altitude they fly for the majority of the flight, the risk is extremely minimized to encounter severe unpredictable dangers. Weather is a factor, but for the most part avoidable. The biggest problems with air travel are related to safety and security which can be countered by maintenance, high safety and security standards which makes air travel extremely safe by all measures. When a plane crashes (which is rare in itself), it rarely affects people on the ground.
Pedestrians have the right of way in or out of a crosswalk.if a pedestrian was crossing outside of a cross walk and initiated the accident shouldn’t they be the ones held responsible?
Creating new problems while solving other is the very nature of the progress of technology. Hopefully the new ones are lesser problems....if this is simply collateral damage in the progress of technology or if we are creating new problems in trying to solve others...
That is one in 10 million. But you probably mean "a very low number". Well... do you know anyone that has been involved in traffic accidents? Because I know several people and I don't know that many people in total....thus the 0.00001% of people who are a risk on roads...
I live in Copenhagen and I have been riding a driver-less, fully automated subway since I got here....why not simply push pubic transportation in automated trains and subway for all I care?
The way I see it, and it is only my view, is the biggest advantages are when there is no one even in the car.Phil wrote: ↑27 Apr 2019, 20:00Hence statistics and probability. Planes fly in the sky, in designated air routes. At the altitude they fly for the majority of the flight, the risk is extremely minimized to encounter severe unpredictable dangers. Weather is a factor, but for the most part avoidable. The biggest problems with air travel are related to safety and security which can be countered by maintenance, high safety and security standards which makes air travel extremely safe by all measures. When a plane crashes (which is rare in itself), it rarely affects people on the ground.
The sheer number of cars on the road (increasing), the density (also increasing) and the high number of unpredictability one might encounter makes driving increasingly dangerous. Compared to that flying is a drop in a bucket, so yes, insurrance companies are well informed.
AVs will not counter that. AVs will not reduce the increase of vehicles on the road. It will not reduce traffic density. Accidents will happen and when they will, they will also impact innocent bystanders. When they do, it will come down to the question if this is simply collateral damage in the progress of technology or if we are creating new problems in trying to solve others.
The only thing AVs have going in their favor is that it's a glorified self-driving taxi. Not much more. I really find it fascinating that people think this is something that will benefit humanity in some way. The only line of logic I can somewhat follow is that by enforcing AVs to take over manual-cars is that the human element is removed - thus the 0.00001% of people who are a risk on roads are replaced by a piece of software. Accidents by humans in cars are IMO not a result of people being "bad" at driving. Some may be influenced by alcohol and drugs and more increasingly distractions at the wheel (conversation, phone, texting, navigation, smoking or other distractions), but I also see the increase in accidents as a net result of increasing traffic density on roads.
If safety was the only real concern for the push for autonomous vehicles - why not simply push public transportation in automated trains and subway for all I care? Much smarter in light of environmental concerns too btw. Oh but wait, no car manufacturer has a vested interest in public transport. Care to guess why?
I guess the number i was trying to come up with is so small, it’s not quantifiable. Think of it like this: even a dangerous irresponsible driver will not always be a risk to others during the tens-of-thousands of kilometers he might cover in his lifetime. On the other hand, a perfectly responsible driver might find himself distracted for 2 minutes on his 2 hour commute as he is texting someone while driving. 9999 out of a 10000 times nothing might happen. Or he might strike gold and something happens that could have been avoided if only he’d not be distracted at that very instant. The point being, even dangerous drivers or drivers who are easily distracted may drive thousands of kilometers without having an accident or being a substantial risk to others.hollus wrote: ↑27 Apr 2019, 20:43That is one in 10 million. But you probably mean "a very low number". Well... do you know anyone that has been involved in traffic accidents? Because I know several people and I don't know that many people in total.phil wrote:...thus the 0.00001% of people who are a risk on roads...