Slashdot Mirror


People Are Harassing Waymo's Self-Driving Vehicles (usatoday.com)

Waymo's testing dozens of self-driving mini-vans near Phoenix. Now the Arizona Republic asks why the vehicles are getting so much hate, citing "a slashed tire, a pointed gun, bullies on the road..."

"Police have responded to dozens of calls regarding people threatening and harassing Waymo vans." That was clear August 19, when police were called because a 37-year-old man who police described as "heavily intoxicated" was standing in front of a Waymo and not allowing the van to proceed. "He stated he was sick and tired of the Waymo vehicles driving in his neighborhood, and apparently thought the best idea to resolve this was to stand in front of one of these vehicles," Officer Richard Rimbach wrote in a report.

Phil Simon, an information systems lecturer at Arizona State University and author of several books on technology, said angst from residents is probably less about how the Waymo vans drive and more about people frustrated with what Waymo represents. "This stuff is happening fast and a lot of people are concerned that technology is going to run them out of a job," Simon said. Simon said it is hard for middle-class people to celebrate technological breakthroughs like self-driving cars if they have seen their own wages stagnate or even decline in recent years. "There are always winners and losers, and these are probably people who are afraid and this is a way for them to fight back in some small, futile way," Simon said. "Something tells me these are not college professors or vice presidents who are doing well."

Police used video footage from Waymo to identify the license plate of a Jeep that kept driving head-on toward Waymo's test car -- six different times, one in which the driver then slammed on the brakes, jumped out of their car, and demanded that Waymo get out of their neighborhood. Another local resident told the newspaper that "Everybody hates Waymo drivers. They are dangerous." On four separate occasions, people have thrown rocks.

A 69-year-old man was even arrested for pointing a revolver at the test driver in a passing Waymo car. He later told police he was trying to scare Waymo's driver, and "stated that he despises and hates those cars." He was charged with aggravated assault and disorderly conduct. The man's wife told reporters he'd been diagnosed with dementia, but the Arizona Republic calls it "one of at least 21 interactions documented by local police during the past two years where people have harassed the autonomous vehicles and their human test drivers," adding "There may be many undocumented instances where people threatened Waymo drivers..."

"The self-driving vans use radar, lidar and cameras to navigate, so they capture footage of all interactions that usually is clear enough to identify people and read license plates," the paper adds. (Waymo later cites its "ongoing work" with communities "including Arizona law enforcement and first responders.") When one local news crew followed Waymo vehicles for 170 miles to critique their driving, a Waymo driver eventually pulled into a police station "because the driver was concerned we might've been harassing them. After they learned we were with the media, they let us go on our way."

3 of 262 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Surveillance Convenience as a forced necessity by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1, Troll

    Who gives a fuck. The number of cars in the road not made in the US has been significant since before you were born. Your post wreaks of Trumptardism.

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  2. Because America is not a democracy by rsilvergun · · Score: 1, Troll

    I'm pretty sure if you put it to a vote folks wouldn't want the cars on public roads yet. Especially the kinds of conservative folks who frequent Arizona (that's literal conservatives, e.g. folks who are slow to implement change, not to be confused with the colloquial definition of "conservative", e.g. someone who's politically far right wing).

    It's purposefully difficult to get a vote on things in most jurisdictions. The rules are complex and require a ton of manual labor in the form of signatures. Generally only people with money can do it, and folks with money want the cars on the road because they're planning on making a killing off them.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  3. Re: It got a waiver to the state driving test. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is yet another case of an underemployed writer looking for something to dramatize for a paycheck.

    Unlike most of the whiners here, GP certainly among them given he is clearly a believer in the idea that community always comes before individual rights, I actually live in Phoenix. In fact I live in the area where Waymo cars are the most prevalent. Also, like most Phoenix drivers, I'm a very impatient, aggressive driver in a region notorious for road rage, and where everybody on the freeway proudly tailgates and drives 80 when the speed limit is 65, while the police don't give a shit and will often join you.

    The Waymo cars are noticeable in the sense that there's a big disco ball on the top, but other than that, they're quite unremarkable. Moreover, I've yet to hear a single person complain about Waymo cars. Beyond that? They're actually far less annoying than the snowbirds and Canadian wildlings that swarm this place and clog up the freeways by following the stupid speed limit.

    You hear that Canada? Nobody cares if you speed unless you are on Indian reservation, where going 56 in a 55 zone will get you a ticket, and the judge decided you're guilty weeks before you ever got to court.

    That said, the guy may have been homeless. You see, the homeless here can get aggressive on occasion if you don't tip them a dollar for standing at the side of the freeway ramps while you mind your business. I could see this guy getting pissed because I don't think self driving cars are good tippers.