Researchers ran more than 8,000 images through the software and found that the self-driving car systems were nearly 20% better at detecting adult pedestrians than kids, and more than 7.5% better at detecting light-skinned pedestrians over dark-skinned ones. The AI were even worse at spotting dark-skinned people in low light and low settings, making the tech even less safe at night.
I would say that’s not actually at all a relevant question, but a form of whataboutism, since this is looking at just driverless programs and comparing how they are with themselves, and what problems with programming and training models could result in that difference.
Agreed. The argument of matching autonomous vehicle perceptions with human perception should be completely irrelevant. When an autonomous vehicle has that significant of a margin of error, who ends up being responsible for the accident? When humans are involved, the driver is responsible. Is a manufacturer liable in the event of all autonomous vehicle caused accidents? Guaranteed corporations will rally and lobby to make that not possible. The situations aren’t the same and a huge selling point of autonomous vehicles has always been that they should be the safest form of piloting a vehicle.
When an autonomous vehicle has that significant of a margin of error, who ends up being responsible for the accident?
There’s some details to be sorted out, of course, but this isn’t the major question people make it out to be.
When humans are involved, the driver is responsible.
As is the owner, at least in the US. People will stay responsible for their vehicles (and, more relevantly, for insuring them).
Is a manufacturer liable in the event of all autonomous vehicle caused accidents?
If it turns out to be a defect, of course they are. They are even without the vehicle having autonomy. If they become responsible for more of the vehicle’s performance, of course it stands to reason they’ll be responsible for more of the outcomes as well.
a huge selling point of autonomous vehicles has always been that they should be the safest form of piloting a vehicle.
Which is exactly why it is relevant to compare their safety to that of human drivers.
The crucial point in autonomous car adaption ought to be whether they are better than humans or not. So if they hit fewer children than human drivers do, they’re better, even if they were a further 20% better at avoiding adults.
I’d say a 20% difference is pretty significant.
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I would say that’s not actually at all a relevant question, but a form of whataboutism, since this is looking at just driverless programs and comparing how they are with themselves, and what problems with programming and training models could result in that difference.
Agreed. The argument of matching autonomous vehicle perceptions with human perception should be completely irrelevant. When an autonomous vehicle has that significant of a margin of error, who ends up being responsible for the accident? When humans are involved, the driver is responsible. Is a manufacturer liable in the event of all autonomous vehicle caused accidents? Guaranteed corporations will rally and lobby to make that not possible. The situations aren’t the same and a huge selling point of autonomous vehicles has always been that they should be the safest form of piloting a vehicle.
There’s some details to be sorted out, of course, but this isn’t the major question people make it out to be.
As is the owner, at least in the US. People will stay responsible for their vehicles (and, more relevantly, for insuring them).
If it turns out to be a defect, of course they are. They are even without the vehicle having autonomy. If they become responsible for more of the vehicle’s performance, of course it stands to reason they’ll be responsible for more of the outcomes as well.
Which is exactly why it is relevant to compare their safety to that of human drivers.
The crucial point in autonomous car adaption ought to be whether they are better than humans or not. So if they hit fewer children than human drivers do, they’re better, even if they were a further 20% better at avoiding adults.
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