pmdulaney
5 hours ago
I think that even if they do end up being safer statistically, they will fail differently than humans, so that people learning of Waymo accidents will correctly say, "I NEVER would have done something that stupid!"
5 hours ago
I think that even if they do end up being safer statistically, they will fail differently than humans, so that people learning of Waymo accidents will correctly say, "I NEVER would have done something that stupid!"
4 hours ago
This argument makes me think Waymo find us consumers stupid - and I think Waymo hopes by saying it enough people will parrot it (like they did Tesla FSD self-published "stats".)
Of course Waymo claims its safer in cherry-picked data - but it's a silly claim. Any self-driving vehicle is NOT inherently safer than a human driver due to scope and capability.
A human can drive a car unassisted. However - a Waymo in a unmapped area or without a supervisory human teleoperator cannot run, and therefore a safety comparison is apples to oranges and as presented completely disingenuous.
No Waymo can get you out of an emergency situation. There is no Waymo running without these two conditions of a supervisory driver and limited geographic area it works in, and newsflash they tend to run in fair weather areas with high tolerances for drivers breaking common laws and creating nuisances, which Waymo doesn't seem to be counting. I think the societal costs are tracking and billing directly to those experimenting on us on the roads instead of closed testing environments...
Signed, a huge fan of Waymo, and of being objective. We're not that dumb.
6 hours ago
Except when there’s a power outage. Of railroad tracks Or when they’re driving through active police crime scenes
Or massive connectivity outages Or massive cloud infrastructure outages
Also the sensor package costs as much as 4bedroom home in the Midwest.
Other than those things, they’re better.