Police in England installed an AI camera system along a major road. It caught almost 300 drivers in its first 3 days.::An AI camera system installed along a major road in England caught 300 offenses in its first 3 days.There were 180 seat belt offenses and 117 mobile phone

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    36
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Your car also isn’t a private space when the kid you just hit goes through your windscreen because you were doing 10 over the limit while looking at your phone

      • @ProvableGecko
        link
        English
        41 year ago

        Doesn’t matter, you still can’t run them over

        • @LifeInMultipleChoice
          link
          English
          31 year ago

          Yes I can, the AI is trained to detect users not wearing seatbelts and those being on their phones. Never has it seen my hydrogen powered snowplow-bearing vehicle that glides through street playing kids like a hot knife through butter at a summer bbq. Those photos shouldn’t get sent back for review.

          • @soren446
            link
            English
            3
            edit-2
            9 months ago

            deleted by creator

    • @doublejay1999
      link
      English
      -81 year ago

      Would be nice if my privacy and road safety were related issues, but they are not.

      It’s absolutely trivial to make a car that physically couldn’t exceed the speed limit, or would not start until the driver is secure, or the phone is stowed, or threat did not had multi level menus in touch screen nave.

      instead they build infrastructure to have AI take and analyse photographs of us.

      You need to give it a bit more thought.

      • @RoyalEngineering
        link
        English
        81 year ago

        Your car is a private space for the most part—put up those fuzzy dice even if they could block your view. U wanna turn your music so high you can’t hear a siren? Go for it—for the most part. Your driveway and any road you wanna put on your property is also a private space.

        A shared road is not private. That’s the issue here. The question for regulators and governments is: How do you make sure everybody is reasonably safe without recalling billions of cars to have the “trivial” changes you proposed?

        Sometimes that’s good old fashioned seat belts. Sometimes that’s Ai. Could be a speed bump. Privacy really doesn’t apply here—you’re in a public space.

        • @afraid_of_zombies
          link
          English
          41 year ago

          If a shared road is not private how come radar detectors are usually illegal? You are in public picking up radio signals. Clearly there is no expectation of privacy when you are sending out radio waves in a shared area.

      • @Aceticon
        link
        English
        0
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Each individual driver is not entirelly self-contained in their motivations and the way they drive, with no influence from what happens to other drivers around them.

        Privacy and road safety are definitelly linked, because there is a systemic effects to more effective enforcement of driving rules, both because drivers fear getting caught a lot more (because they know somebody who knows somebody who got caugh) and because people tend to drive like those around them (it’s one thing to be the rule breaker amongst widespread rule breaking, it’s another being the rule breaker amongst widespread rule compliance).

        Now, privacy lowered for the sake of something other than enforcing the rules (or if there is an alternative way of achieving the same that does not break people’s privacy), that’s a whole different thing, but if the reason is to catch rule-breakers it will most definitelly lead to lives saved because there will be people who now drive within the rules because they fear getting caught who would otherwise have driven in ways that endanger others.

        To quote you: “You need to give it a bit more thought.”