Fully Autonomous Cars May Never Actually Be Allowed

The minefield of moral quandaries surrounding autonomous cars that are involved in accidents could effectively render the race for full autonomy pointless
Fully Autonomous Cars May Never Actually Be Allowed

Self-driving cars may never be allowed to exist in the way they are currently being imagined, according to BMW’s special representative to the UK, Ian Robertson.

Speaking at the UK’s Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) Summit, he said that the morality surrounding how artificial intelligence would make life-or-death decisions, and whether humans could really accept the cold logic of any data-based choice that ended someone’s life, however unintentionally, could see self-driving cars limited to certain road types. He’s quoted as saying:

“Imagine a scenario where the car has to decide between hitting one person or the other — to choose whether to cause this death or that death. What’s it going to do? Access the diary of one and ascertain they are terminally ill and so should be hit? I don’t think that situation will ever be allowed.”

Urban areas could be made to fit the needs of self-driving vehicles
Urban areas could be made to fit the needs of self-driving vehicles

At present, BMW’s autonomous test vehicles on UK roads regularly run 660-mile routes, but the human at the wheel needs to take control an average of three times per journey. Robertson envisages that governments, however eager they are to get to the front of the technological arms race now under way, will eventually set limits. He explained:

“Then there is the overarching consideration of the regulators that we need to consider. In the UK, the government is encouraging autonomous testing — even if some of its fundamentals go against the Highway Code, the fabric of our laws. They know we are in a race to take leadership and that opening up to testing could have significant benefits.

“But I believe that in the long term, the regulators will step in and set boundaries about how far we can go. It might be to allow it only on motorways, as they are the most controlled environments.

“Or perhaps they’d essentially ‘rope off’ parts of cities to allow autonomous cars into controlled areas, where the consequences for pedestrians are controlled.”

Comments

Skyline_Fanboi ( Apex05)

Guys, the war is finally over.

  • epic music plays *
08/08/2018 - 21:04 |
3 | 2
Anonymous

“Cars that drive themselves have been invented ages ago, their called taxis.” - James May

08/08/2018 - 21:32 |
17 | 0
Vincent Lin

Quite the contrast to Bob Lutz’s extremely pessimistic predictions

08/08/2018 - 22:18 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Car guys: Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Halleluuuuujaah!

08/08/2018 - 22:58 |
4 | 1
LEitner

Enter your comment…

08/08/2018 - 23:12 |
0 | 1
Ewan23 (The Scottish guy)

I bloody hope this is what the future holds.

08/08/2018 - 23:29 |
1 | 0
autonomousposter

The only thing I care about is for car manufacturers to keep the steering wheel and pedals.

08/09/2018 - 00:33 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Theres still hope!!

08/09/2018 - 01:50 |
2 | 0
MK7R358

YAHOOOO

08/09/2018 - 04:17 |
0 | 0
James Leeder

This is the danger of “But Sometimes…” There is a video on youtube that talks about this using the example of LED traffic lights. To sum it up, LED traffic lights are objectively better than incandescent lights in every way, but sometimes when it snows, they don’t produce enough waste heat to melt the ice and they can become partially obscured.

Point being, it’s stupid to stop an advancement that minimizes existing problems because maybe there will be new ones. I like driving as much as anyone here, but saying “Yeah, but this new technology will have problems” while ignoring the much longer list of positives is very short-sighted.

08/09/2018 - 06:03 |
5 | 0

Thank you someone who speaks sense on here. I like driving as much as most people do on here, but the technology we have today would not exist if people didn’t push it and change mind sets. Computers had issues to start with but now we use them every day. if just because there was a possible problem they stopped everything we would not have phones, cameras, tvs, computers, brake discs, alloy wheels, radial tyres, turbos, superchargers etc.

08/10/2018 - 06:50 |
3 | 0

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