Tesla's self-driving car beta software has "assertive" setting that breaks common safety laws
Teslas self-driving car beta software has assertive setting that breaks common safety laws
AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES | NEWS/ANALYSIS By Kea Wilson (Streetsblog USA) January 13, 2022
This article was first published in Streetsblog.
Thousands of Teslas are now being equipped with a feature that prompts the car to break common traffic laws and the revelation is prompting some advocates to question the safety benefits of automated vehicle technology when unsafe human drivers are allowed to program it to do things that endanger other road users.
In an October 2021 update its deceptively named Full Self Driving Mode beta software, the controversial Texas automaker introduced a new feature that allows drivers to pick one of three custom driving profiles chill, average, and assertive which moderates how aggressively the vehicle applies many of its automated safety features on US roads.
The rollout went largely unnoticed by street safety advocates until a Jan. 9 article in The Verge, when journalist Emma Roth revealed that putting a Tesla in assertive mode will effectively direct the car to tailgate other motorists, perform unsafe passing maneuvers, and roll through certain stops (average mode isnt much safer). All those behaviors are illegal in most US states, and experts say theres no reason why Tesla shouldnt be required to program its vehicles to follow the local rules of the road, even when drivers travel between jurisdictions with varying safety standards.
Basically, Tesla is programming its cars to break laws, said Phil Koopman, an expert in autonomous vehicle technology and associate professor at Carnegie Mellon University. Even if [those laws] vary from state to state and city to city, these cars knows where they are, and the local laws are clearly published. If you want to build an AV that drives in more than one jurisdiction and you want it to follow the rules, theres no reason you cant program it up to do that. It sounds like a lot of work, but this is a trillion-dollar industry were talking about.
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