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Lessons from the Cruise Robotaxi Pedestrian Dragging Mishap

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

A robotaxi dragged a pedestrian 20 feet down a San Francisco street on the evening of October 2, 2023, coming to rest with its rear wheel on that woman's legs. The mishap was complex, involving a first impact by a different, human-driven vehicle. The following weeks saw Cruise stand down its road operations amid allegations of withholding crucial mishap information from regulators. The pedestrian has survived her severe injuries, but the robotaxi industry is still wrestling with the aftermath. Key observations include that the robotaxi had multiple possible ways available to avoid initial impact with the pedestrian. Limitations to the computer driver's programming prevented it from recognizing a pedestrian was about to be hit in an adjacent lane, caused the robotaxi to lose tracking of and then in essence forget a pedestrian who was hit by an adjacent vehicle, and forget that the robotaxi had just run over a presumed pedestrian when beginning a subsequent repositioning maneuver. The computer driver was unable to detect the pedestrian being dragged even though her legs were partially in view of a robotaxi camera. Moreover, more conservative operational approaches could have avoided the dragging portion of the mishap entirely, such as waiting for remote confirmation before moving after a crash with a pedestrian, or operating the still-developing robotaxi technology with an in-vehicle safety driver rather than prioritizing driver-out deployment.


3 Intelligent Racing Toys Worth Owning Put To The Test

Forbes - Tech

With the advent of new robotic sensors and smartphone controllers the world of miniature car racing has got a lot more crowded the last few years. No longer just slot car racing, these products combine fully voiced dramas, video game mechanics, race physics and upgradeable vehicles. Here's what you need to know to match the right racing set with your family in my Anki Overdrive, Hotwheels AI and Scalextric Arc Air comparison. Proper robotics used to enable the cars to know where they are on the track as well as opponents. AI drivers really are intelligent in Anki Overdrive and employ different tactics to beat you.


Self-Driving Cars Will Be Ready Before Our Laws Are

IEEE Spectrum Robotics

It is the year 2023, and for the first time, a self-driving car navigating city streets strikes and kills a pedestrian. A lawsuit is sure to follow. But exactly what laws will apply? Today, the law is scrambling to keep up with the technology, which is moving forward at a breakneck pace, thanks to efforts by Apple, Audi, BMW, Ford [pdf], General Motors, Google, Honda, Mercedes, Nissan, Nvidia, Tesla, Toyota, and Volkswagen. Google's prototype self-driving cars, with test drivers always ready to take control, are already on city streets in Mountain View, Calif., and Austin, Texas. In the second half of 2015, Tesla Motors began allowing owners (not just test drivers) to switch on its Autopilot mode.