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Tesla's Autopilot Mode Reportedly Saves Pedestrian's Life (electrek.co)

An anonymous reader writes: Following reports of Tesla's Autopilot mode being linked to a fatal crash, one Tesla Model S owner is reporting that the Autopilot mode has likely saved a pedestrian's life. The driver sent an email to Elon Musk explaining the situation, which was confirmed by Tesla through the vehicle logs: "I wanted to let you know that I think my car probably saved the life of a pedestrian last night, 7/16 around 10:30pm when I was driving in Washington DC with my daughter." The driver says him and his daughter were trying to locate where sirens were coming from "when a pedestrian stepped out in front of [their] Model S in the dark with dark clothes and in the middle of the road." The car slammed on its breaks before he could and "stopped just inches from hitting the pedestrian." The driver said, "I am not sure if I would have been able to stop before hitting him but I am so glad the car did." The Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB), which is standard on all Tesla vehicles and is part of Tesla's Autopilot mode, is what was at work here. It appears that many of the convenience features of Autopilot were not activated at the time of the incident. This is likely the first of many good press stories released by Elon Musk, who said he would consider releasing the stories of accidents prevented by the Autopilot mode with the authorization of the Tesla owners and by confirming the events through the vehicle logs. Elon Musk did also announce Tesla's 'Master Plan, Part Deux,' which includes new kinds of Tesla vehicles, expanded solar initiatives, updates on Tesla's 'autopilot' technology, and a ride-sharing program.

7 of 219 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Public Admission of Stupidity by SensitiveMale · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I drove like a moronic asshat, and nearly killed some innocent person, only to be saved by a computer, I might not admit it so publically. Especially when the police and the DMV read the internet.

    So a pedestrian in dark clothes, at night, not hearing an electric car, and jaywalking by stepping out from between vehicles means the driver drives like "a moronic asshat."

    You need to recalibrate your scale.

  2. Re: Wow... by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's still the driver's fault that he almost killed someone. That hasn't changed.

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    Ezekiel 23:20
  3. Elon Musk is still missing the point by quantaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The driver says him and his daughter were trying to locate where sirens were coming from "when a pedestrian stepped out in front of [their] Model S in the dark with dark clothes and in the middle of the road." The car slammed on its breaks before he could and "stopped just inches from hitting the pedestrian." The driver said, "I am not sure if I would have been able to stop before hitting him but I am so glad the car did." The Automatic Emergency Braking (AEB), which is standard on all Tesla vehicles and is part of Tesla's Autopilot mode, is what was at work here. It appears that many of the convenience features of Autopilot were not activated at the time of the incident.

    So what happened is the driver was driving the vehicle, a situation happened for which he was unprepared but was a probable accident, and the AI took over and prevented the accident.

    Almost no one is complaining about this scenario, and if I recall other car companies have deployed something similar and it's a decent first step towards autonomous vehicles.

    The problem with the "autopilot" is it essentially allows the AI to do all of the driving, meaning the human invariably stops paying attention and the AI becomes almost exclusively responsible for driving safely.

    Its great that the AI is good enough that it prevented this accident, it still doesn't make the pseudo self-driving mode a good idea.

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    I stole this Sig
  4. Re:Public Admission of Stupidity by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes but since it was 10:30 at night one might figure the person might have seen the headlights.

  5. Re:Public Admission of Stupidity by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All cars are almost silent at low speeds. Someone in a car that is coasting will make roughly the same sound as an electric car, especially to a listener in front of the car.

  6. Re: Wow... by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think that's the driver's fault.

    In most countries you'd be wrong. Driving to conditions means taking into account the ability for someone to dart out into traffic and slowing down to a point where you can see unexpected events with enough notice to safely stop. This is why driving the speed limit is not a legal defense when hitting a pedestrian.

    That said it's not nearly as bad as people here make out. There's a big sliding scale between the perfectly safe driver and the horrendously dangerous one, and we can't really expect everyone to always be perfect in every situation. But in many countries the driver would be at fault.

  7. Re: Wow... by NormalVisual · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Driving to conditions means taking into account the ability for someone to dart out into traffic and slowing down to a point where you can see unexpected events with enough notice to safely stop.

    Practically speaking, that would mean an implicit speed limit of 10mph or less anywhere there's on-curb parking. Even at 10mph (15 feet per second), if someone walks out in front of you a car length ahead, you're still pretty likely to hit them.

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    Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas