Self-Driving Cars Approved by California Legislature
In California, it's illegal to talk on a cell
phone handset while driving your car. The reasoning is pretty simple:
with one hand glued to your smartphone, not only are you distracted
chatting about what happened on last night's episode of "Here Comes
Honey Boo Boo," but you also only have one hand to hold the wheel.
But
what if you were sitting in your car and didn't actually have to drive?
What if all you had to pay attention to was getting to the next level
in Angry Birds?
The
California state legislature just moved that dream a little closer to
reality by approving a bill paving the way for driverless cars to be
allowed on Golden State freeways.
The
bill, authored by State Senator Alex Padilla (D-Van Nuys), was passed
by the state Assembly on Wednesday and then given the overwhelming
thumbs up by the state Senate the following day.
If
signed by Governor Jerry Brown, Padilla's bill would legally allow
autonomous vehicles on the road and charge the state's Department of
Motor Vehicles with determining the standards for self-driving cars,
rules which current do not exist under the present vehicle code.
The Economist notes that about 90 percent of
traffic accidents are caused by human error, meaning that if humans are
taken out of the process, there's a strong probably that accident rates
will plummet.
Even so, the bill requires the cars to have a flesh-and-blood human being behind the wheel if something goes wrong.
"It
sounds space age, but it's almost here," Padilla told the San Jose
Mercury News. "If we can reduce the number of accidents, that alone is
worth doing this bill."
Bay Area tech giant Google [GOOG
685.09
3.41
(+0.5%)
]
has been leading the way in self-driving cars. The team behind the
project asserts that the technology is largely already there and their
self-driving cars are ready to hit the road right now.
Earlier this year, Google took a number of state legislators on a test non-drive of their driverless cars.
"I
had the pleasure of going out for a drive on the autonomous vehicle,"
California state Senator Alan Lowenthal told Reuters. "I have to say
that there are some still issues with it, but it's a better driver than I
am."
Earlier this
week, Google engineers announced that their fleet of self-driving cars
have logged a combined total of 300,000 miles.
Despite
the bill's widespread political support, some quarters have voiced
reservations, particularly over what happens if driverless cars crash
and lawsuits are filed. "This does not protect adequately the
manufacturers for liability concerns," Alliance of Automobile
Manufacturers spokesman Dan Gage told the Mercury News.
California
is the second state to pass legislation addressing self-driving cars;
Nevada passed a law last year. In May, Nevada's DMV issued the country's
first license plate to one of Google's self-driving Priuses.
Hawaii, Florida, Arizona and Oklahoma are all also considering similar legislation.
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