Originally Posted By: Wolf359
Originally Posted By: fdcg27
First off, you've overstated the death rate per vehicle miles traveled by a factor of nearly one hundred. You could look it up.
Second, the estimate that 94% of crashes are due to human error is questionable and many accidents attributed to human error are caused by factors not anticipated by the driver that also won't be anticipated by autonomous machines.
Third, I think I made it pretty clear that it would take a significant leap of logic to accept that autonomous vehicles would bring the reductions in fatalities that you claim.
Finally, I'm unaware of any fully autonomous mode for any Tesla currently for sale. Yeah, Tesla does offer a semi-autonomous operating mode but also makes it clear that the driver must maintain awareness at all times while underway. There have been fatal accidents in cases where drivers relied upon their Tesla's autonomous systems and ignored the road ahead.
Sorry you're right, that's per 100 million miles not per million.
The point is that those systems are already out there and in use. I believe 2014+ Mercedes E class and many other more recent years have collision avoidance systems as standard or as an option. I'm sure they're going to do a study at some point to see how many accidents those cars got into versus the ones that didn't have them.
Also I'm not sure you're clear that I'm not the one making those claims, it's the companies making those vehicles that are making those claims. They're still in testing at this phase, at some point it will be ready. But like fusion power, hydrogen power, or AI, it could be one of those things that's always 10 years down the road, but it looks like it's going to be sooner rather than later. If they didn't think it was achievable and didn't provide some benefit, they'd probably just give up. It's easy for you to be negative on it when you don't know what the inner workings are.
Fairly advanced collision mitigation features are quite available.
My 17 Honda pickup truck has this suite of mitigation products plus others not listed here.
Anyone can point to a lone accident, and blame anything for it, but the compiled data on the individual mitigation components seems absolutely clear cut.
UD
