Goto

Collaborating Authors

 chinese robotaxi driver


A day in the life of a Chinese robotaxi driver

#artificialintelligence

Robotaxi safety operator is an occupation that exists only in our time, the result of an evolving technology that's advanced enough to get rid of a driver--most of the time, and in controlled environments--but not good enough to convince authorities that they can do away with human intervention altogether. Today, self-driving companies from the US, Europe, and China are racing to bring the technology to commercial application. Most of them, including Apollo, the self-driving arm of Baidu, have started on-demand robotaxi trials on public roads but still need to operate with various constraints. With an associate degree in human resources, Liu has no academic training related to this job, But he has always loved driving, and he acted as the driver for his boss in a previous role. When he heard about the self-driving technologies, his curiosity pushed him to look up related jobs online and apply.

  AI-Alerts: 2022 > 2022-09 > AAAI AI-Alert for Sep 7, 2022 (1.00)
  Country:

The Download: Chinese robotaxi drivers, and AI gun detection

MIT Technology Review

When Liu Yang started his current job, he found it hard to go back to driving his own car: "I instinctively went for the passenger seat. Or when I was driving, I would expect the car to brake by itself," says the 33-year-old Beijing native, who joined the Chinese tech giant Baidu in January 2021 as a robotaxi driver. Robotaxi driver is an occupation that only exists in our time, the result of an evolving technology that's advanced enough to get rid of a driver--most of the time, in controlled environments-- but not good enough to convince authorities that they can do away with human intervention altogether. Liu is one of the hundreds of safety operators employed by Baidu, "driving" five days a week in Shougang Park. But despite having only worked for the company for 19 months, he already has to think about his next career move, as his job will likely be eliminated within a few years.


A day in the life of a Chinese robotaxi driver

MIT Technology Review

Robotaxi safety operator is an occupation that only exists in our time, the result of an evolving technology that's advanced enough to get rid of a driver--most of the time, and in controlled environments-- but not good enough to convince authorities that they can do away with human intervention altogether. Today, self-driving companies from the US, Europe, and China are racing to bring the technology to commercial application. Most of them, including Apollo, the self-driving arm of Baidu, have started on-demand robotaxi trials on public roads yet still need to operate with various constraints. With an associate degree in human resources, Liu has no academic training related to this job, But he has always loved driving, and he acted as the driver for his boss in a previous role. When he heard about the self-driving technologies, his curiosity pushed him to look up related jobs online and apply.

  AI-Alerts: 2022 > 2022-08 > AAAI AI-Alert for Aug 2, 2022 (1.00)
  Country: