this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2024
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Well how else would you do it?
You drive a car and can't quite figure out what is happening in front of you.
Do you:
From the description offered in the article the car chose C, which is wrong.
Given the millions of global road deaths annually I think B is probably the least popular answer.
Honestly slowing down too much can easily create an accident that didn't exist in the first place.
Not every situation can be handled by slowing down.
If that's the default behavior on high speed road this could be deadly for the car behind you.
I mean that's machine learning for ya
I wasn't asking about the car's logic algorithm; we all know that the SDC made an error, since it [checks notes] hit another car. We already know it didn't do the correct thing. I was asking how else you think the developers should be working on the software other than one thing at a time. That seemed like a weird criticism.
Sorry, I didn't answer your question. Consider the following instead:
Your self driving car has crashed into a god damn tow truck with a backwards facing truck.
Do you:
According to the article the company has chosen A, which is wrong.
Radars > Don't hit stuff
Ideally they don't need actual accidents to find errors, but discover said issues in QA and automated testing. Not hitting anything sounds like a manageable goal to be honest.