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Nearly 1 In 4 Adults Surf the Web While Driving

cartechboy writes "A new survey out this week says that the number of motorists who surf the Web has nearly doubled over the past four years. In 2009, 13 percent of motorists admitted that they'd accessed the Internet while driving. In 2013, that figure had jumped to 24 percent. Smartphones are the primary culprit, making the unsafe task even easier. Other distracted driving behavior is on the rise, too, and younger drivers are the biggest issue — 76 percent of motorists 18 to 29 said that they talked on a hand-held cell phone while driving. 70 percent said they were texting. Keep in mind we have states legislating smartphone use task by task, which clearly doesn't help."

16 of 365 comments (clear)

  1. Google Cars by invid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All the more reason why we need to get autonomous cars on the road.

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
  2. As many as 1 in 4 adults by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As many as 1 in 4 adults should never have made it to adulthood, with the clearly disabled mental faculties. To bad driving is a case where the dumb shit you do is as likely to kill an innocent person on the road as yourself. It's like vaccines really, there aren't enough consequences on the people doing the harm.

    1. Re:As many as 1 in 4 adults by ah.clem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The world moves ever more quickly, so people need to scramble to keep up, and staying offline for an entire car drive can be problematic.

      I submit that this is just an excuse for a lack of self-control and/or a feeling of self-importance/self-indulgence. It is entirely possible to hold a position of high responsibility, do an hour commute each way to a tech job and NEVER turn on your phone. It is even possible to go to the theater, the philharmonic, out to dinner, have drinks with friends, or even read a book with your phone off. Really.

      If you seriously subscribe to this notion then I think you have sold your life too cheaply.

      --
      "Life is not magic." Dr. Ron Weiss - "If we don't play God, who will?" Dr. James Watson
    2. Re:As many as 1 in 4 adults by Gavrielkay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Remind your boss how you'll be sure to have the plaintiff include the company in any lawsuit that results from being required to browse while driving. It really is no excuse at all. If you are so indispensable to your company that every moment of your time must be available to them then you've got the wrong job. Also, they aren't paying you enough, because you aught to be able to afford a driver if you're that important.

  3. Assuming makes an ass out of u... by Subject-17 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...Since when does "accessing the internet" equate to "surfing the web"? They gave checking emails and surfing the web as examples of accessing the internet, but I'd like to see if "accessing the internet" was the actual question or not. Every single time I drive my phone "accesses the internet". Google play on an android smartphone? Hell yeah that's accessing the internet. Sending a text at a stop light? That's google voice for me, so accessing the internet. Fucking GPS? Yep, accessing the internet once again to get all that sweet, sweet map data. I don't know of anyone who owns a smartphone but doesn't use it for GPS in the car. The only exceptions are those with a dedicated GPS, which, again, accesses the actual internet to download map data, and get routing information.

  4. Deceptive verb form by randalotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Saying that "Nearly 1 in 4 adults SURF the web while driving" is very different from the actual results of the survey: "Nearly 1 in 4 adults SURFED the web while driving AT LEAST ONCE IN THE LAST YEAR".

    Frankly, I'm surprised the number is so low since they include checking email.

  5. Selfish by Tim+the+Gecko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pick a random left turn light in the Bay Area, and look at the driver waiting third or fourth in line. Some of them are very slow to move off when the light goes green, because they are reading or even typing on their smartphone. Then they play catch-up after a cursory look at the road ahead. They rate their entertainment above the safety of pedestrians, cyclists and other drivers. It's unbelievably selfish.

  6. You shouldn't be texting at stop lights.... by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Insightful

    .... the fact that the light is red does not negate your responsibility to pay attention to your surroundings. From a legal and moral point of view you're operating a motor vehicle on a public roadway regardless of the color of the light, and you have an obligation to give that task your full attention.

    The same goes for touching up your cosmetics, reading your snail mail, drinking your coffee, or any of the other items on the huge list of things people do when they're supposed to be devoting their full attention to the safe piloting of a ton or more of steel.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    1. Re:You shouldn't be texting at stop lights.... by Khyber · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "If the safe operation of a car requires your continuous full attention then perhaps you shouldn't be driving."

      If you can't dedicate your faculties to a single task, you shouldn't be driving at all. Turn your license in you crippled sack of shit. It's fuckwits like you that are the reason for half of my body being reinforced with titanium and kevlar, you witless brainless idiotic moronic piece of fucking human scum. Fuck you and your children, and your whore wife (if you even have one you fucking basement dwelling geek piece of shit.)

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  7. Re:I do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great, you're only a nuisance instead of a threat. God forbid you spend a single moment of your life not feeling entertained.

  8. Re:I do this by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    end yourself

    He probably will, sooner or later - hopefully without taking someone else with him.
     

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  9. Re:I do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hand your licence back and fucking walk you irresponsible dickhead

  10. Perfectly Safe by neoshroom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you are being misled by the Slashdot headline. Notice the headline says:

    "Nearly 1 In 4 Adults Surf the Web While Driving"

    But then below it is says:

    "In 2009, 13 percent of motorists admitted that they'd accessed the Internet while driving. In 2013, that figure had jumped to 24 percent."

    Finally, note that "surfing the web" and "accessing the Internet" are not the same thing. Surfing the web means viewing websites. But accessing the internet while driving can occur automatically by your car, when your phone is in your pocket, by listening to Internet-streamed music or by using GPS. All of these are perfectly reasonable to use in your car.

    --
    Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
  11. How about a deal? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I can prove by experiment that can drive more safely while texting than most people with their attention fully focused on the road

    I wish more people would actually try that. The reality check would probably shock some of them out of this kind of reckless behaviour, making us all safer.

    How about a deal? You take that test, and if you really are safer while texting than most people when they're fully concentrating, you get to keep doing it, completely legally. However, if it turns out that you're actually more dangerous, and we also then know that you're deluded about your own abilities and therefore unable to properly judge how to drive safely within those abilities, you have to give up your licence and never drive again. Fair?

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  12. Re:I do this by EdIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This should be put into categories apparently.

    One is navigation. Looking at your built in navigation and hitting a few buttons or zooming on the map is not all that bad at an intersection. I find that I am at an intersection for at least 15-30 seconds, if not a lot more during traffic. Taking 5 seconds to review the map should not lead to a distraction where you create a delay in traffic. You really have to not be paying attention to stop picking things up in your peripheral vision while stopped.

    Two is communications. This is just evidence of how bad the addiction is to information technology today. I see plenty of people who cannot go more than 5 minutes without checking FaceFuck or Twatter. That near constant need for connection and feedback is based on the same psychological principles that keep people at slot machines for hours on end.

    What makes it worse is that these people are creating the STANDARD for communication in the future. When I tell people that I did not respond to them since I was driving and on my way back to the office I actually get the response back, "That's no excuse. You could have just sent a text message. You need to work on your communication skills".

    I think these people would literally go insane if you transported them back to say around 1719. "What the fuck do you mean I have to wait 5 months to get a letter back!", and "You mean I have to walk all the way across town, knock on a door, be welcomed into the house, BEFORE I can talk to my friend?"

    Not sure that I can call where we are headed progress. It seems that attention span is at a historically low level for humanity.

  13. Re:I do this by tftp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I can prove by experiment that can drive more safely while texting than most people with their attention fully focused on the road will I be exempt from these kinds of laws

    Major math fail. Accidents are driven by statistics. What you do and what other people do is not related. If you are more dangerous today than yesterday, the average also rises.

    Note that if you are such an excellent driver, you still may need that last bit of skill if an idiot decides to something idiotic in your path. You will not get that last bit of skill if you are distracted.