bearcub;336095 wrote:
I think that's quite astute, and related to the wide uptake of A.I. is the adoption of fully self-driving cars which use A.I. to navigate. The technology isn't quite there yet, but in 5 or 10 years it'll work 99.99% of the time. The thing that may halt its adoption is the 0.01% where several people are killed accidentally by self-driving cars, then there's a big class action lawsuit in the US which wipes out Tesla, or whoever.
As long as a "safety driver" is required to take control at a moments notice then the entire purpose of the expense of AI in a car is gone.
I don't want to sit behind the wheel for three hours being pinged every three minutes to make sure Im still awake. I might as well actually drive, it passes the time more quickly. It's actually quite enjoyable on a journey.
But yes the liability issue is very tricky indeed. Who is responsible. The programmer, the car maker, the driver?