I think the core problem there is liability. I'm as good or as bad of a driver as I can be, but no matter what I'm responsible for the driving. If I get into one accident a year that's one accident a year.
A self-driving car might be 5x better than me at driving but logically I can't be liable for what it does. The company making it has to be. 5x better would be 0.2 accidents a year. But multiply by that the 100,000 cars the manufacturer has sold... they don't want that liability. That's why Telsa's autopilot is still supervised, because they want its mistakes to be your problem.
It presents a lot of thorny problems. If I am a persistently dangerous driver I can have my license taken away and be taken off the road. But if a self driving car is judged to be too dangerous for the road you'll suddenly have thousands of people who lose access to their car (assuming a future with self-driving only cars) through no fault of their own. What's their path to getting back on the road?
Your liability is covered by your insurance company. And it costs you on the order of $1000 a year for that privilege.
If the self-driving car company takes on that liability it'll save you the $1000/year. So assume they're either going to charge you an extra $10K up front or an extra $1000/year. For that kind of cash they should be quite willing to take on the risk or they can find an insurance company to do so, if their car is actually safer than an average driver.
This should work in most countries. Perhaps not the US with its pattern of massive punitive damage awards.
Right, but the companies still aren't going to if they don't have to. Otherwise Tesla would be doing it today.
OP said:
> self driving will be statistically significantly better than human drivers, but because it isn't perfect we won't allow it anyway.
My contention is that it's not that everyone is a luddite, it's that while companies are legally allowed to provide quasi-self driving they have no liability for they will do exactly that. And that is what will hold us back.
It can't just be better than the average human driver. it has to be some like 10x as good as the average human driver or on par with a race driver.
Everyone thinks they're above average, even people who know statistics! So if it's merely 20% better than the average driver a huge number of people will conclude "I am above average so I'll do a better job"
Will some of them be wrong? Of course. But tons of them will be right, too.
It can't be statistically significantly better, it has to be statistically overwhelmingly better. Not a part of a standard deviation but several of them.
Those stastics need to be figured out. You are on the right track - there are a few really bad drivers (and I'm not sure if race drivers are better on common roads - anyone have data?). We need to work through those issues. I didn't say average though I said better than humans and left the measurements open because I don't know all the issues to account for.
Correct
The averages include teenage males, elderly, driving while texting, road ragers, people who drive late&tired and DUI enjoyers. Accident rates are extremely fat tailed.
If you aren’t in one of those categories you are immediately dramatically better than average. This is fairly easy to do before even considering being a “good driver” / defensive driver / etc.
This is a major flaw in decision making that some people have:
A new solution that has less problems is worse than an existing solution with more problems.
There's also a willingness to be less upset with humans making a mistake than a machine.
Edit:
Unknown problems may or may not exist so while I think that concern makes sense it doesn't matter until they come up.
I'm making the decision based on the current state. If additional issues come about then you reevaluate if the new solution is better or worse than the existing.
If you consider unknown problems then how can you make a decision?
X+Y > Z?
Where X is the weight of problems for the new solution, Z is the weigh for the existing solution, and Y is a value between 0 and infinity (unknown problems)
I am not elderly, do not DUI, drive tired, or touch my phone while driving. I put myself in a different risk pool by my behavior.
I step into a Tesla FSD car, I am in the same risk pool as everyone else in one when it decides to run 1% of red lights or whatever other stupid bug in the next release.
> There's also a willingness to be less upset humans making a mistake than a machine.
There's willingness to be upset at anyone with deep pockets who can be found accountable. And the motivations for that aren't emotional, they are purely material.
There's a reason why people have spent decades trying to find pharmacological cause for autism, in spite of the enormous amount of evidence that the condition is mostly hereditary.
And a very good reason why vaccines in America are exempt from the legal system.
At the moment it seems much more likely it will be significantly worse, statistically speaking, but because of massive lobbying it will be allowed anyway.
Lidar has problems too. It works quite well if there is a limited number of cars that use it too. Of course if all of those were Waymos you could synchronize sensors to not interfere with each other.
Of course if that fails, perhaps they could use honking as backup sensor.
That spent fuel is viable fuel for a different type of reactor. If I'm not mistaken, those reactors are forbidden in the US. They could be used elsewhere though.
Reprocessing or storing 100 or better yet 1,000 year old fuel is way more cost effective, so it may be a net benefit to keeping it above ground to decay.
Risk doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Current levels of risk mitigation makes nuclear uncompetitive without large subsidies. Arguing to make nuclear less safe is difficult.
Self driving has a similar issue where the value shrinks the more supervision it requires. Tesla is a new benefit in terms of effort but it can’t operate safely while the driver is asleep.
I think that's by broad policy and not by individual risk mitigation. Isn't it something like "if nuclear is cheaper than the average then it has to spend the difference on risk mitigation"?
Not really what I’m talking about. There’s quite a lot spent to avoid known failures and little way to know what the minimum they can get away with.
3 mile island wasn’t a public health hazard but lack of maintenance cost billions by destroying the reactor. Thus prompting the industry to spend significantly more money on maintaining reactors. The problem is it’s really difficult to determine what’s overkill here.
There’s something like 600,000 US bridges and sometimes people look a failure and say it’s rare enough not to be worth doing anything about.
Something like the trolley problem is at work here, but you're the one tied up on the tracks.
Suppose the accident rate for regular cars were 1 fatality every 100 million miles driven (it actually is in the US).
Suppose further a hypothetical self-driving car has a proven rate of 1 fatality every 1 billion miles (10x better). Except when that fatality happens, it is because the car suddenly incinerates when arriving otherwise safely at its destination. Something about the advanced AI technology makes this outcome completely random and completely unfixable.
Which do you choose? Drive yourself, 10x more dangerous? Or leave it entirely up to chance, but 10x safer?
The rational choice is to pick the self-driving car. Yet I suspect many people (including me, I admit) would choose to drive themselves.
How far apart do those numbers need to be before most people give up the steering wheel?
An example of this effect can be already be found in motorcycles. I currently own a BMW motorcycle and a honda truck. The honda has all the modern driver aids, automatic braking radar, lane keeping, etc. It has many airbags and is statistically about 30x safer per mile then the motorcycle. The truck is far easier to drive. I still ride the motorcycle whenever I can. Why? Because the motorcycle forces me to become more fully human, and the truck turns me into more of a machine. On a motorcycle you smell the hay as you pass a field. You feel the cool air as you ride over the stream. Every tiny bump and crack in the pavement has an effect, and you feel them all. You are not in a car, you are in the world. You must PAY FULL ATTENTION to the here and now or you will get squished. A motorcycle forces you to BE HERE NOW.
Our mental suffering is not because car is on autopilot. Suffering happens because WE ARE ON AUTOPILOT. So I chose to trade the 30x risk of death for a 30x reduction in mental suffering. Rational? God I hope not.
It’s especially unfortunate because these cars are not even “full self driving.” It’s just a lie that Musk has gotten away with because there are so many Tesla stakeholders now
Nuclear is probably a difficult comparison, but in both cases it would indeed be about liability. Would the owner have liability? That would increase insurance by a lot, probably significantly make autopilot much more expensive to have.
Is the manufacturer liable? Autopilot would be too much risk and the manufacturer would demand users can only activate it behind the wheel, needs both hands on the wheel while getting a coffee infusion. The tool would lose its advantages.
Power plants aren't insurable because it would financially destroy any company in case of a leak or operating costs would become so high, that nuclear cannot compete anymore.
We maybe will get it one day. Waymo probably did it correctly. Limited road network, careful approach, learn what the problems are and expand on that.
The manufacturers will take liability. Mercedes-Benz is already doing this with their Drive Pilot level 3 autonomous vehicles. Coverage is limited but will expand.
>DRIVE PILOT can be activated in heavy traffic jams at a speed of 40 MPH or less on a pre-defined freeway network approved by Mercedes-Benz. DRIVE PILOT operates in daytime lighting conditions when inclement weather is not present and in areas where there is not a construction zone. Please refer to the Operator’s Manual for a full list of conditions required for DRIVE PILOT.
Alone long and easy drivable roads like highways or german autobahns would have a huge benefit and simple to automate.
You woound only need local people to grab the truck at a parking spot close by to drive them to the target location.
That alone would help long road truckers to see their familys and not having to sleep in their trucks. It would save costs and would make it saver for everyone if all the trucks drive automatically.
BMW and other EV developers can already drive on a lot of german autobahn hands free.
What i also don't understand, if i really want the benefit of self driving car, I only need it when i'm driving long or when i'm intoxicated. Tbh. let me just record the road from bar to my home, let me drive it for a few times until my car knows that direction and done.
> I think it's very possible that we won't get self-driving cars because...
We already have self-driving cars: look at Waymo, etc. look at chinese ride-hailing companies. What we won't have is private-use self-driving cars: a regular person will not be able to buy one.
Of course we will have private-use self-driving cars. Auto manufacturers will get that technology one way or another, either by developing it themselves or licensing it from others. If there's consumer demand then they'll sell it: Mercedes-Benz is already selling level 3 autonomous cars to consumers. Most regular people prefer to own (or at least lease) their own private cars so that they can go wherever they want whenever they want and keep some of their stuff inside.
In which case, it would be largely uninteresting for many of us.
I rarely take an Uber or a taxi (probably single digit number of times a year) and, even if it were half the price, that would be unlikely to change my behavior much.
But waymo does not operate nearly at the same degree as what Tesla FSD aspires to (anywhere, anytime).
While a good amount of functionality exists, the liability model and accidents are big road blocks to seeing this technology truly mainstream, not just select cities/routes/etc
> But waymo does not operate nearly at the same degree as what Tesla FSD aspires to (anywhere, anytime).
I aspire to be a trillionaire. Does that count for anything?
> While a good amount of functionality exists, the liability model and accidents are big road blocks to seeing this technology truly mainstream, not just select cities/routes/etc
Waymo just started service at SFO airport last month.
What’s your definition of mainstream? Everywhere anytime like an Uber?
But it'll be based on risks introduced by preventable human error- hubris, etc.
All it will take is some viral video of a Tesla running over a child or something terrible like that.