If a Driverless Car Goes Bad We May Never Know Why

If a Driverless Car Goes Bad We May Never Know Why

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Read by: Joe Knezevich

Language: English

Length: 4 minutes

Publisher: MIT Technology Review

Release date: 2016-07-13

Two recent accidents involving Tesla’s Autopilot system may raise questions about how computer systems based on learning should be validated and investigated when something goes wrong. A fatal Tesla accident in Florida last month occurred when a Model S controlled by Autopilot crashed into a truck that the automated system failed to spot. Tesla tells drivers to pay attention to the road while using Autopilot, and explains in a disclaimer that the system may struggle in bright sunlight. Today the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said it was investigating another accident in Pennsylvania last week where a Model X hit the barriers on both sides of a highway and overturned. The driver said his car was operating in Autopilot mode at the time.

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