A crowd destroyed a driverless Waymo car in San Francisco::A Waymo car was destroyed in San Francisco as a crowd began vandalizing it and ultimately set the car on fire. Nobody was in the vehicle at the time.

  • @Taniwha420@lemmy.world
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    2149 months ago

    The article states that there was no known motive, but it also states that automated cars in SF have been attacking people and emergency vehicles, in addition to blocking traffic for human drivers.

    It’s pretty clear that this is the beginning of the anti-robot revolution.

    • @phoneymouse@lemmy.world
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      989 months ago

      Watched one of these block traffic once by putting on its blinker to turn down a street with a police barricade up. The street had been closed and the police weren’t going to lift the barricade. Nonetheless, the car put its blinker on and sat there blocking traffic indefinitely.

      • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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        -179 months ago

        I saw a human driver get into a traffic accident because he was mad that the guy ahead of him gave someone space to turn out of a parking lot, they ended up arguing and their cars just sat there further blocking traffic for half an hour until the cops came.

        Why are you acting like robot drivers are the only fallible ones?

              • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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                -259 months ago

                So in your world, planes, trains, and buses pick you up and drop you off at your doorstop? How cute.

                • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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                  179 months ago

                  Nah. Unless you live literally at the station, which happens but is rare, doorsteps are the domain of collect taxis.

                  Which btw are the most economical option in rural areas as you don’t have to drive empty buses around all the time. In cities they should be limited to people actually needing them, also open bicycle paths for microcars for people with mobility issues, not everyone wants or needs a powered wheelchair.

                  • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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                    -179 months ago

                    This is what I mean, you’ll never get rid of enclosed motorized vehicles for a variety of reasons, and if we’re going to have them around, it would be better if they were self driving and killed fewer people than human drivers.

      • Cloudless ☼
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        -229 months ago

        That sounds like a very difficult scenario for AI to resolve. This requires nearly AGI to understand the situation.

    • @Furbag@lemmy.world
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      99 months ago

      The motive was that the car drove down a crowded Chinatown street during Chinese New Year. I imagine something similar might happen if a human driver tried to do the same thing. Not saying the vandals were right to wreck the car, but you don’t just creep a car down a busy street during a festival and expect nothing bad to happen to it when crowd mentality/anonymity takes over. Especially when there’s no driver so no immediate consequences/accountability. I think it was quite fortunate that it was not transporting a passenger at the time.

      • @Taniwha420@lemmy.world
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        39 months ago

        Not unless that human driver was blindly following their navigation app like a total idiot. A person would have said, “oh shit, I want to get out of here.”

        Anyway, I believe under it all we’ve got a tension between generally two different worldviews: those who believe Star Trek is utopia, and those who would rather life was more Hobbittish.

        Personally, The Shire sounds like a nice place to live. Can we choose that please? You can still have computers, let’s just chill on the whole racing to meet our cyberpunk future.

      • @Taniwha420@lemmy.world
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        29 months ago

        Oh. Are you telling me the anti-robot revolution hasn’t actually begun? Well, that’s disappointing. Thanks for taking the time to straighten me out.

        Wait … That’s exactly what a ROBOT would say!

    • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      Oh, well THANK GOD, no human driver has ever been known to block traffic or hold up emergency vehicles!

      What saints you all are for protecting the right of people to work thankless taxi jobs, and have the number one cause of preventable death be traffic fatalities. Nothing could be more noble than preserving the status quo!

        • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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          -89 months ago

          Lol, no they don’t.

          Do you know how many cab drivers execute illegal u-turns, park illegally, cut off cyclists, speed etc.? They literally never get caught or ticketed for anything unless they actually kill someone with their car.

          • @Peppycito@sh.itjust.works
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            159 months ago

            unless they actually kill someone with their car.

            So, which waze executive is going to prison after their car dragged a pedestrian down the street?

                • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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                  19 months ago

                  Since their inception, Waymo vehicles have driven 5.3 million driverless miles in Phoenix, 1.8 million driverless miles in San Francisco, and a few thousand driverless miles in Los Angeles through the end of October 2023. And during all those miles, there were three crashes serious enough to cause injuries:

                  • In July, a Waymo in Tempe, Arizona, braked to avoid hitting a downed branch, leading to a three-car pileup. A Waymo passenger was not wearing a seatbelt (they were sitting on the buckled seatbelt instead) and sustained injuries that Waymo described as minor.
                  • In August, a Waymo at an intersection “began to proceed forward” but then “slowed to a stop” and was hit from behind by an SUV. The SUV left the scene without exchanging information, and a Waymo passenger reported minor injuries.
                  • In October, a Waymo vehicle in Chandler, Arizona, was traveling in the left lane when it detected another vehicle approaching from behind at high speed. The Waymo tried to accelerate to avoid a collision but got hit from behind. Again, there was an injury, but Waymo described it as minor.

                  The percentage of drivers who would be in prison with that record is precisely 0.

      • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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        119 months ago

        Hey, I’m all for upending the status quo. But that “thankless job” is one people rely on. My dad included. This isn’t some noble act by a company to end meaningless, menial work. It’s a ploy by a company to cut those pesky “workers” out of the money. There’s no backup plan for the people who rely on driving for money—more people than ever, by the way. This is literally a profit boosting “evolution” in the continued unlivability crisis. This isn’t Star Trek. It’s seasons 3-4 of Mr. Robot.

        • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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          19 months ago

          This isn’t some noble act by a company to end meaningless, menial work. It’s a ploy by a company to cut those pesky “workers” out of the money.

          I mean, yeah. That’s why basically any corporation does anything, it’s a core function of how capitalism is supposed to work and continue to enrich society. Should we have not invented computers because it shuttered 4/5 of the paper mills in my dad’s home town?

          There’s no backup plan for the people who rely on driving for money—more people than ever, by the way.

          Yeah, but that’s a problem with government safety nets and supports, not with a company engineering a new technology.

          This is literally a profit boosting “evolution” in the continued unlivability crisis. This isn’t Star Trek. It’s seasons 3-4 of Mr. Robot.

          I would argue that it’s almost exactly Star Trek.

          • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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            9 months ago

            I’d argue the opposite. Capitalism doesn’t enrich society. It enriches capitalism. Any “benefit” to society is purely for selfish reasons. Its motives being corrupt, its actions are not noble.

            [there being no safety nets] is a government problem, not a company’s

            Capitalism ruined this too. Lobbyists, special interest “donations” (read: bribes), are all done by companies just like this one. They’ll lobby for harmful laws, under the guise of “but driverless cars are for the people’s safety!” All the while, evading taxes and lobbying against closing those tax loopholes or raising taxes to help the workers who now have no job.

            These things don’t exist in a vacuum. Especially in today’s late stage of capitalism, there is no moral behavior from these companies, because they are wading into a world where their very existence offers them and seemingly implores them to do harm for their bottom line. There is no “church and state” separation between capital and governance. They are a rat king, further entangled by every new company making their way into this utterly corrupt marketplace of crookery and exploitation. We can’t ignore what’s happened over and over and over and over again because this time the benefit will surely outweigh the harm done to achieve profitability!

            • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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              9 months ago

              So you think that because the American government is corrupted by capital, destroying a Waymo car will lead to better regulation?

              Or an overthrow of capitalism to be replaced with which system of governance that isn’t also entangled with capital?

      • @Taniwha420@lemmy.world
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        09 months ago

        I want as few cars as possible, mixed zoning, and walkable cities.I don’t believe in a technocentris utopia. I want more quality relationships, and technology in our lives to be more restrained. I am in no way an advocate for the status quo (which by all accounts is AI and robot cars). Robot cars are a step in the wrong direction.

        • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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          19 months ago

          I want as few cars as possible, mixed zoning, and walkable cities

          agreed.

          Robot cars are a step in the wrong direction.

          You’ve made no argument as to why, or why the alternative of human drivers killing millions is better?