Posted on 01/14/2016 9:45:47 PM PST by Cowman
The American government is officially putting a giant vote of confidence behind self-driving cars. And the cash to back it up.
Today, US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx is announcing a nearly $4 billion plan thatâll help manufacturers and tech companies develop safe, automated vehicles in the next ten years with real-world pilot projects. Itâs all part of President Obamaâs plan to make American transportation as futuristic as possible.
The funds, which have been set aside in the proposed federal budget for 2017, will go toward pilot programs in specific transportation corridors in the US. The government will then work with industry leaders to kick the development of automated vehicles into high gear. The goal is to make sure that those robo-cars are safe, and that American infrastructure is ready for them.
Secretary Foxx will revealed the huge game-changer at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit this afternoon with Ford, Google, Delphi and others. In a statement from the Department of Transportation provided to Gizmodo before the announcement, he said this about the plan:
âWe are on the cusp of a new era in automotive technology with enormous potential to save lives, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and transform mobility for the American people. Todayâs actions and those we will pursue in the coming months will provide the foundation and the path forward for manufacturers, state officials, and consumers to use new technologies and achieve their full safety potential.â
Secretary Foxxâs announcement will also update the policy guidance on self-driving vehicles developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in 2013. This is crucial as it now points to autonomous vehicles as a valuable tool for creating safer streets and highways.
NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind said today, in the same provided statement:
âNHTSA is using all of its available tools to accelerate the deployment of technologies that can eliminate 94 percent of fatal crashes involving human error. We will work with state partners toward creating a consistent national policy on these innovations, provide options now and into the future for manufacturers seeking to deploy autonomous vehicles, and keep our safety mission paramount at every stage.â
How will this change start to roll out? Within the first six months of 2016, the government will hit two major milestones.
First, the NHTSA will collaborate with the industry to finalize guidelines for âsafe deployment and operation of autonomous vehicles,â plus state partners, and the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators on the state level that can help guide a consistent framework on the national level.
Next, to accommodate the folks on the engineering side, Secretary Foxx wants manufacturers to submit ârule interpretation requestsâ so that the technology aligns with the law. The Department of Transportation points to one example of when BMW inquired about the companyâs remote self-parking system, and whether it met federal safety standards.
Self-driving cars are coming to American roads, ready or not.
Actually it has already gone beyond the plate readers. Sniffing stations have been set up in certain states that appear to be just any road maintenance or construction sites but each car that goes by has their exhaust tested and if there is anything the gubment boys don't like you will have your plate scanned and a fine will be sent to you even if you have already passed the emission test for your state and purchased the sticker.
The slope just gets slipperier and more expensive
Thinking about setting up an LLC in a suitable state like Wyoming with an innocuous name and registering the car under it and then getting plates for it in my own state. Then any plate scan will show my business PO Box and town, not my name and street address. Getting insurance is not a problem. This is exactly how leased company cars are normally titled, so DMV doesn’t blink.
I can’t seem to lay my finger on the provision in the Fourth Amendment that gives the government the power to conduct continual recording of my travels. If they insist on violating the Fourth, and the insist on giving themselves a pass at violation of any of the plain language of the Constitution, I am under no obligation to make it easy for them.
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