The reality is - probably - that the first implementation will be in environments where there is a simple choice: go or slow/stop.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Sat Apr 17, 2021 10:45 pmNot a big 'if', a f---ing HUGE 'if', and one most unlikely to be fixed ever.
If it could recognise the problem that far ahead it could just stop, so almost by definition the 'problem' scenarios where it can't deal with stuff will be rather urgent. The reality is that cars will hand back control when a crash s inevitable, so just shifting the blame really.
The sort of situations I presume that you are imagining (pile-ups on a motorway where the AV is thundering along in lane 3, please give a few examples if I'm way off the mark) are not going to be happening for some considerable time, if at all. It's - with my very limited understanding of how development is going - more likely (and this is a guess) - will have had a "computer says no" moment long before, handing back control when a certain level of complication and risk has been reached and not exceeded.
My - as I said, limited - understanding is that systems won't be designed that say "Ding Dong. Crash imminent. Your turn." Trolley bus, again.