That’s a very odd thing to wonder about. Are you into snuff movies?but - you do wonder, whether in car videos from the FSD drivers whose tesla crashed between the wheels of large semi's, look similar - everyone has a plan until the unexpected happensthey get punched in the mouth
if anything the exposure of chagpt making things up, starts to show public, how, transposed into the world of driving, AI learning can have fatal errors.
As much as Tesla took the hit for that death, back then Tesla actually licensed in their ADAS system from Mobileye and they took very little flack for it at all. I’m pretty sure they are now owed by Intel.
Other than the name there are literally no two parts that are the same as the system being demoed in the video above.
What is often not considered is a crash like that is unlikely to have the same outcome in Europe because of the design of European trucks. They are required to have side railings to stop cars getting under the trailer in collisions for this exact reason.
The Uber crash ended that self driving programme, I was surprised at that if I am honest. I thought they’d pretty much pick up where they left off after a few weeks.
But as Fuzz said, these systems are there to prevent deaths not remove them entirely. As long as they make materially less mistakes than humans, they are objectively better.
This thread has gone way off topic.
