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Transportation AI United States

What Will It Take To Make Automated Vehicles Legal In the US? 320

ashshy writes Tesla, Google, and many other companies are working on self-driving cars. When these autopilot systems become perfected and ubiquitous, the roads should be safer by orders of magnitude. So why doesn't Tesla CEO Elon Musk expect to reach that milestone until 2013 or so? Because the legal framework that supports American road rules is incredibly complex, and actually handled on a state-by-state basis. The Motley Fool explains which authorities Musk and his allies will have to convince before autopilot cars can hit the mainstream, and why the process will take another decade.
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What Will It Take To Make Automated Vehicles Legal In the US?

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  • 2013 or so? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:29PM (#48241531)

    So Elon Musk is planning to revive the DeLorean?

  • by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:29PM (#48241533) Journal
    How about a compelling reason?
    • safety is the "compelling" reason, but that is a bit to ambiguous. Why should I pay more for a self driving car when I have not had an accident since I was a kid? Unless it becomes law, self driving cars* will be a gimmick. Kind of like heated seats, kind of nice, but not necessary for your average joe. And then there is a large portion of people who like driving... I think self driving cars will become more johnny cabs than personal vehicles. And maybe the Maybachs of the rich and busy. *Let's assume all/
      • Why should I pay more for a self driving car ...

        Why do you assume they would cost more? The sensors required for a SDC should not cost much when mass produced, and the money saved on insurance will likely more than compensate for that.

        • by Richy_T ( 111409 )

          And the more likely reason will be that that's what you'll have to do if you want to travel on the roads and not use public transport once it proves safer than human drivers.

        • There is no such thing as Insurance Premium Reductions.
        • The sensors required for a SDC should not cost much when mass produced, and the money saved on insurance will likely more than compensate for that.

          Thanks for the laugh.

          Insurance companies take any technical change whatsoever as an excuse to raise premiums.

      • Insurance premium reductions?

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

        Unless it becomes law, self driving cars* will be a gimmick. Kind of like heated seats, kind of nice, but not necessary for your average joe.

        Let me guess: you've never had to start your car and drive home at forty below zero, have you?

        Heated seats are, at least in part, a response to the increased fuel economy of modern engines, which don't produce enough waste heat to warm the cabin rapidly. I believe some diesel-engined cars even have electric elements in the heater for cold weather, because the coolant takes so long to warm up.

        Back on topic, my guess is:

        First we'll see decent 'hands free' cruise control for highway driving.
        Then we'll see auto

      • I enjoy driving my six speed stick on a nice windy country road, but it was less enjoyable whenever I had to drive in stop and go for an hour or two each way from work. I'd have paid for something which would let me read a book the same way I usually did while taking public transit. As adoption goes up I'd expect improved transit times as inter-vehicle communication should be able to significantly ease congestion problems. Eventually I can see non-automated cars prohibited from freeways, at least during
    • Re:For Starters (Score:5, Informative)

      by MozeeToby ( 1163751 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:43PM (#48241759)

      $60 billion dollars are spent on truck driver salary's in the US. If automated vehicles achieve a 1% improvement in fuel economy (which is ludicrously conservative) you would save the economy another $45 billion in fuel costs. Not to mention the hundreds of millions of hours of wasted time, tens of thousands of deaths, and hundreds of thousands of injuries that could be possibly be prevented or at least reduced.

      • But the jobs? Won't somebody think of the truck stop hookers?

    • Removing human ego from driving is an extraordinarily compelling reason.
    • The compelling reason is that self-driving cars could free up tens of billions of man-hours a year in the US alone. People could use the time they spend in cars for entertainment or productivity. It would be one of the truly great labor saving inventions.

      For that to work though, the car would need to be truly autonomous and that gets into tricky legal issues.

  • What will it take? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:29PM (#48241549) Homepage Journal

    Automated vehicles that work?

    • Or that any company is actually ready to sell?

      I mean, the ones that exist "work" but none of the companies involved are in any hurry to put them out.

      • SDC technology is already being released incrementally. You can already buy cars that have automatic lane control, interval control, etc. Automatic collision avoidance will be next, and then automatic braking for stop signs and traffic lights. When full SDCs arrive, people will hardly notice, because most of the technology will already be in existing cars.

    • Money.
      Money to pay the Political Parties.
      Money to pay for the governments.
      Money to pay for the insurance companies.
      Money to pay the local governments.
      Money for advertising
      Money for paying off special interests groups.
      If there is left you can put some money into making the vehicle work better.

  • by craighansen ( 744648 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:30PM (#48241575) Journal

    both his biggest existential threat and time itself to make it happen by 2013.

  • A lot of bribes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:33PM (#48241623) Homepage

    Q: What Will It Take To Make Automated Vehicles Legal In the US?

    A: A lot of bribes for people at various levels of government.

    Wait, did I say "bribes"? Sorry, I meant "lobbying and campaign contributions". I have a hard time telling those things apart.

    • An economic incentive that causes many companies to put pressure on their representatives...

      or

      A major tragedy that could have been avoided with autonomy that gets continual news coverage (not that this worked for gun control) ...otherwise, reason and good sense have no place here

      • A major tragedy that could have been avoided with autonomy that gets continual news coverage (not that this worked for gun control)

        Yeah, I'm not sure this works in general. For one thing, we have loads of tragedies from car accidents-- I think it's as low as 30,000 deaths per year in the US now, but a few years ago it was more like 40,000. It's possible that many of these could be fixed by self-driving cars, but the American public doesn't care because we love to pretend we're race car drivers.

        But also, in general, there can be all kinds of tragedy and scandal, and politicians will go spend their time on damage control, making it se

  • Let's hope what it takes is: Really good automated vehicles.

    I think this is one technology that we don't really want typical google-style beta testing (think gmail) with. Let's wait for things to mature a bit before they go mainstream.

  • But can we hit 88 MPH first?

  • by Hrrrg ( 565259 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:38PM (#48241693)

    Call me when they can make an automated car that car drive in snowy conditions when no lane landmarks are visible. Or one that can turn into a lane of busy traffic that currently requires you to make eye contact with another driver to get them to slow down and let you in. Then we can worry about legalizing it. Legalization is trivial compared to the technical challenges. Personally, I suspect that there won't be a truly automated cars in my lifetime.

    • by astro ( 20275 )

      Or one that can turn into a lane of busy traffic that currently requires you to make eye contact with another driver to get them to slow down and let you in.

      This piece, at least, was one of the earliest-solved, easy problems. Wirelessly networked cars still having human drivers have been talked about in theory and experimented with for years - before this totally driverless thing became... a thing.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        A theoretical solution that requires universal adoption (wireless networking in every vehicle on the road) does not count as "solved".

    • by jopsen ( 885607 ) <jopsen@gmail.com> on Monday October 27, 2014 @01:19PM (#48242165) Homepage

      Call me when they can make an automated car that car drive in snowy conditions when no lane landmarks are visible.

      Should you drive in a snow storm? Either way, with GPS, etc this is not impossible, though I suspect the car would refuse to drive automatically under these circumstances... But keep in mind not all cars on the roads today can be driven under snowy conditions, try driving without a roof :) he he..

      Or one that can turn into a lane of busy traffic that currently requires you to make eye contact with another driver to get them to slow down and let you in-

      Is this even technically legal to do that? If you're behind a stop or yield sign, you cannot proceed forward if your interfere with ongoing traffic in any way. In practice it can be a bit different as someone should be nice and help you in; in which case an automatic car could move in too... Acting on eye contact or perceived signals like hand weaving does not hold in court and in case of an accident you would be fully liable.

      Legalization is trivial compared to the technical challenges. Personally, I suspect that there won't be a truly automated cars in my lifetime.

      How old are you ? :) Just kidding...

    • Call me when they can make an automated car that car drive in snowy conditions when no lane landmarks are visible.

      Call me when they can make a driver from the south who can drive in snowy conditions. Hell, call me when they can make a driver in Washington D.C. drive safely in ideal conditions.

    • It's purely a political and legal issue.

      The technical challenges are nearly completely solved. What remains is infrastructure improvements, standardization, iterative improvements that will come from wide spread rollout of incremental features towards full autonomy.

  • If anything is gonna kill/delay the automated vehicle market, it's gonna be people suing the shit out of car manufacturers when anything at all goes wrong. And make no mistake, it's gonna be up to the manufacturer to prove it wasn't their hardware/software that caused it.

    And unfortunately, the people that would normally argue in favor of being reasonable with new tech will be suffering from inner turmoil as that idea conflicts with the "big corporations are ruthlessly profitable" belief.

    It's gonna be intere

    • by schwit1 ( 797399 )

      The manufacturers are going to need panoramic camera views that show the vehicle stayed in its lane, wasn't going too fast, maintained safe distances to other vehicles and also shows a darwin award winner walking into the path of traffic while texting.

    • by vakuona ( 788200 )

      If car manufacturers can show that they autonomous vehicles are on average far safer than the alternative, then I can see courts refusing to awards costs in excess of the costs that would be imposed on human drivers who caused collisions.

      In fact, this would be ridiculously easy to legislate for. You can just require that autonomous cars be on average safer than their human driven equivalents before a manufacturer can sell them. At the point you are ten times more likely to be injured in a human driven car t

  • When the automated car can tell itself that those two shiny things on the side of the road are deer eyes, then maybe and only maybe.
    • Re:identify (Score:4, Informative)

      by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @03:55PM (#48244553)
      An IR camera can see a dear hiding in the grass from much further away than you can see.
  • Seriously, if our federal highways were to allocate the inner most lane as being for automated cars starting in 2020, AND allowed 20 mph higher speeds, this would encourage faster adoption of automation for cars and trucks. Ideally, the vehicles would require a freq for talking to each other with as well.
  • Legal:? Last week, I heard a speech by Vint Cerf, and he says the next iteration of google car will NOT HAVE A GAS OR BREAK PEDDLE, OR A STEERING WHEEL AT ALL.

                  mark

  • Obligatory Back to the Future reference.

  • by ashshy ( 40594 ) <pooh@@@poetic...com> on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:53PM (#48241837) Homepage Journal
    OS here. Sorry about the 2013 typo; Musk is aiming for 2023 at best:

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/15/tesla-driverless-cars_n_5990136.html [huffingtonpost.com]

    I blame the lack of autopilot for these human fingers.

  • by macsimcon ( 682390 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @12:54PM (#48241851)

    A few months ago, I attended a talk on autonomous vehicles at the Petersen Auto Museum in Los Angeles. The executive from the California Department of Transportation told us that they’ve met with dozens of representatives from different states and countries, and they are all waiting to see what happens here.

    California already has laws allowing the testing of autonomous vehicles, and many manufacturers have enrolled. They counted fifteen companies that were working on autonomous cars, including Toyota, Volvo, and most every car company you could name.

    They described the five categories of vehicle automation, and explained that the first autonomous (not Musk’s so called “autopilot” which isn’t) vehicles will hit the road in the summer of 2015.

    • by awtbfb ( 586638 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @03:51PM (#48244507)

      They described the five categories of vehicle automation, and explained that the first autonomous (not Musk’s so called “autopilot” which isn’t) vehicles will hit the road in the summer of 2015.

      Here's the levels. Most high-functioning systems on the market, like the Tesla version, are in the Level 1-2 range.

      No-Automation (Level 0): The driver is in complete and sole control of the primary vehicle controls – brake, steering, throttle, and motive power – at all times.

      Function-specific Automation (Level 1): Automation at this level involves one or more specific control functions. Examples include electronic stability control or pre-charged brakes, where the vehicle automatically assists with braking to enable the driver to regain control of the vehicle or stop faster than possible by acting alone.

      Combined Function Automation (Level 2): This level involves automation of at least two primary control functions designed to work in unison to relieve the driver of control of those functions. An example of combined functions enabling a Level 2 system is adaptive cruise control in combination with lane centering.

      Limited Self-Driving Automation (Level 3): Vehicles at this level of automation enable the driver to cede full control of all safety-critical functions under certain traffic or environmental conditions and in those conditions to rely heavily on the vehicle to monitor for changes in those conditions requiring transition back to driver control. The driver is expected to be available for occasional control, but with sufficiently comfortable transition time. The Google car is an example of limited self-driving automation.

      Full Self-Driving Automation (Level 4): The vehicle is designed to perform all safety-critical driving functions and monitor roadway conditions for an entire trip. Such a design anticipates that the driver will provide destination or navigation input, but is not expected to be available for control at any time during the trip. This includes both occupied and unoccupied vehicles.

      U.S. Department of Transportation Releases Policy on Automated Vehicle Development [nhtsa.gov]

  • What will it take?!?!?! Solar Freakin Roadways!
  • We probably could have automated Highways since the late 70’s. In the 50’s engineers imagined all the brains and machinery for automating Highways in the highways – and would have been incredibly expensive. Now we want to put all the brains and sensors in the car, again (at least for now) incredibly expensive. There must be a sweet spot of compromise for 90% of driving situations that requires only modest changes to our transportation infrastructure and doesn’t require the cars to

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @01:08PM (#48241981)
    Though, I'm not quite sure in which direction.

    On the one hand, the number of claims should bottom out once self-drive cars are in place and the bugs sorted out.
    On the other, they'll have to re-calculate how they determine premium rates since the " human driver " factor will be (mostly) removed.

    So, while they won't be paying out nearly as much in claims, they won't be taking in nearly as much in premiums either. Should be interesting.

    Speed Traps will no longer be the revenue-cow that many towns rely on. Red-light cameras and similar tech will become a waste of time. How WILL Law Enforcement pay for their Soldier-Wanna-Be toys . . . :|

    Hell, these things, once mainstream, will also shift the entire traffic structure around. Stalls, wrecks, weather, and other rubber-neck variables will pretty much go away meaning a much better driving experience. Great for the driver (passenger ?) , but probably not so great for the State / City governments who just LOVE congestion because it pushes the traffic onto their Toll Roads which they seem to be building in greater numbers these days. I would expect to see the Toll Roads become ghost roads ( in those areas where the Toll Roads are a means to bypass highway congestion and not the ONLY means into or out of an area ) as the reasons for utilizing them in the first place will become irrelevant.

    Will need to put some more thought into it, but I bet the introduction of the self-drive vehicle will impact quite a bit of modern day revenue-generators which will probably cause a major panic along some lines. lol
    • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @01:17PM (#48242125) Homepage
      Insurance companies will push heavily IN FAVOR of auto-autos.

      This assumes that robots are safer drivers than humans (which is an obvious requirement before they legalize it).

      The reasons are clear:

      1) Car insurances don't want to pay you because someone else hit your car, but they can't prove it. Robot cars decrease this risk.

      There is a LOT of money spent by the insurance companies trying to prove fault. It is big business. By reducing the actual risk from other drivers, insurance companies will save billions, even if they never insure a robot car.

      Also, insurance companies make money when things become safer - because rate changes are always behind actual risk changes. So more safety always equals insurance profits and less safety always equals insurance losses.

      I agree that speed traps and red light cameras will vanish, but I am not so sure about toll roads. In fact, they might grow in power, using the robots to connect tolls. They might simply have a tax charge to drive fast in the state. As in, your robot car will be limited to 50 mph unless you purchase the NJ Fast Lane upgrade from New Jersey Transit.

      • The one question I have on the insurance situation is when an autonomous car causes an accident who is fault? The manufacturer or the owner? Since the owner was not in command of the vehicle I would think it would be the manufacturer.

        So then take the auto-auto scenario to its end conclusion, no one drivers manually ever anymore and the manufacturer is always the one at fault. It may take 50 years from the intro of the auto/manual version, but it would come eventually. At which point auto insurance would be

  • *nothing* (Score:3, Insightful)

    by globaljustin ( 574257 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @01:11PM (#48242025) Journal

    We will never have truly *autonomous* vehicles driving on the same lanes in the same traffic as regular diver vehicles.

    The problem is *not* technical in nature ultimately (now, the tech is not near sufficient, but assuming it could improve), the problem is *liability* for when something goes wrong.

    What will happen: Dedicated lanes on interstates

    Like HOV lanes, basically.

    The only way it will actually be implemented is in controlled zones where there are much fewer variables...

    To think anything else is magical thinking and not connected to reality

    • by devman ( 1163205 )
      Driverless cards will have all kinds of sensors and likely have blackboxes as well. If one gets in to an accident data from those senser coudl be used to reconstruct the cause of that accident and assign blame. Insurance companies will love it assuming driverless cars are safer and turn out to be the victim of accidents more than the cause of accidents. Liability can be covered similar to the way it is handled now. Operator indemnifies manufacturer and carries an insurance policy to cover the assumed risk,
  • Suppose you tell the current politicians:

    "Hey, I got this great invention, it will improve our transportation 10x, but it will require highly toxic and flammable chemicals to be stored in underground tanks every other block in highly populated areas. It will also cause around 1.3 million deaths per year worldwide, and become the #9 leading cause of death".

    How many current politicians would approve this?

    That is right, if it was for the current politicians, the car would not exist. We would all be st

    • by aclarke ( 307017 )
      A similar thing happened around the time of the invention of the automobile. If you're not aware of the early "red flag laws", here's an interesting article [thatsobsolete.com] about them. It took a couple decades before horseless carriages could legally be driven on the road without what we would now consider ridiculous hindrances.
    • .....and ban this right away, it will not matter if the fatality rate is even lower than manually driven cars.

      You ignore the gargantuan influence insurance companies wield over politicians.

      Who do you think got these types of laws passed?

      • No smoking in bars
      • No sodas sold in big cups
      • Mandatory seat belts
      • Child safety seats

      Those were the doing of an entity who could see that modifying these behaviors would reduce the payouts they make each year. This entity lives and breaths statistics and charges its c

  • The oncoming of fully automated vehicles won't happen the way that being discussed in geekish circles. Governments tend to move with all the speed of a glacier, and insurance companies will go out of business if the number of traffic accidents plummet. (Yes, they will. Water conservation sounded great until a lot of people started actually conserving water, now the water companies are having to jack up rates to stay solvent.)

    What will happen is that "safety features" will be added to top end vehicles and

  • If the laws allow open containers (alcohol) in automated vehicles, all downsides will be ignored and the population will demand them.

  • My blind spot indicator on my car still isn't perfect and I still have to check.

    Just today I noticed a black hatchback in my right blind spot that the indicator didn't pick up. I don't know if it was dirt on the sensor, the color of the car vs the blacktop, etc.

    So... I don't know how much I want to trust a car that fully relies on that.

    Because if I have to babysit the car the entire time, I might as well drive.

    Eventually maybe, and hopefully within my lifetime. But I won't be using one any time soon.

  • The self-driving cars have a long way to go (no pun intended) [wired.com] before they should become ubiquitous.
  • It is naturally a legal question of who can be held liable should an accident happen.

    People want to assign blame to the car manufacturer, to the driver...

    There are valid cases that can be discussed on an individual level for each one. If a manufacturer has a bug in the code that results in a crash and did not do due diligence, that is one thing.

    But there is another solution that many people don't consider.
    NO FAULT INSURNACE

    This is how it is in Ontario, Canada. It has it's flaws, but the concept is really go

  • On the one hand we have internet providors effectivly stopping community internet.
    On the other hand we have a lot of blue collar people who are going to be put out work.

    While I cannot believe that the Teamsters and the Cab driver unsions are just laying down on this issue, in the end, the might not be able to stop driverless cars, because that's what Darpa wants for for their war machines.

    Who is going to be the first unlucky person to die for driverless car research?
    Who is going to be the furst unlucky pers

  • It's hard to imagine how autonomous vehicles can exist safely amongst vehicles driven by inebriated, distracted, careless, or angry humans.

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