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In my work we are involved in numerous tests of autonomous cars around the world - the company makes visibility sensors. Right now, no-one can even get the car to see properly or reliably in anything but clear air on closed test tracks. Add fog, rain, smog, etc., and the results are nowhere near good enough to let them loose on the roads. Take away the white lines and most are blinder than a bat. I don't really understand how there haven't already been more "drivers" or other road users killed during live testing.
The technology will catch up eventually but it ain't there yet and hasn't progressed very far in the last 5 years![]()
.... That's good news in my opinion. Technology never stands still, as you know well, but it seems to me that the number of existing road incidents/accidents will simply be substituted by incidents just as fatal but of a different type. Personally, I would expect there to be an increase in fatal and serious incidents due to 'driverless' cars.



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