Google's Self-Driving Car Crashed ... So What Happens Now?
Photo: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Google's Self-Driving Car Crashed ... So What Happens Now?

After logging millions of miles in autonomous-drive mode, one of Google's self-driving cars has finally been the cause of an accident.

It happened in Mountain View, California, on Valentine's Day. Nobody was hurt and if it were two vehicles with humans at the controls it would be just another low-speed accident.

But this was different. In this case, Google's car was in autonomous drive mode maneuvering near sand bags in the street when it steered into a bus that was going 15 mph in the next lane over.

The accident report Google filed with the California Department of Motor Vehicles described the crash as, "The Google AV test driver saw the bus approaching in the left-side mirror but believed the bus would stop or slow to allow the Google AV to continue." At the time, Google's self-driving car was going 2 mph and wound up with body damage to the left front fender, left front wheel and a driver's-side sensor.

Google's February monthly report on autonomous drive activities further discussed the accident saying: "We clearly bear some responsibility, because if our car hadn't moved there wouldn't have been a collision. That said, our test driver believed the bus was going to slow or stop to allow us to merge into the traffic, and that there would be sufficient space to do that."

Does this accident change the push from Silicon Valley to Washington, D.C., to develop self-driving cars?

"This is just one accident, and we will likely see more," said Bryant Walker Smith an assistant professor of law at the University of South Carolina. "The world is a messy place and roads are messy places so this isn't the last accident we'll ever see with a self-driving vehicle."

Walker Smith specializes in studying the development of laws and regulations involving self-driving cars.

He understands why this accident will generate lots of headlines, but beyond that he says it doesn't tell us much.

Except for this: tech companies and automakers still have a lot to figure out.

"These technologies are not yet ready for a wide range of driving conditions," he said. "El Camino Real (where the accident happened) is a horrible, busy, suburban road and there was construction. This shows Google is still trying to figure out how to handle messy conditions like this."

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Interesting ...

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Warren E. Hamilton

I'm the Owner of The Digital Eye, LLC. Retired NYS employee, w/ experience as: A 2021-23 Albany Co. Redistricting Commissioner; a board member and regular member of multiple NFP orgs; and, an active member at HWFC Co-op.

8y

How many cars with drivers crash every day?

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Jerry L.

Colorado Notary Training Instructor, retired Mobile Notary, freelance writer, cybersecurity advisor

8y

I have invented the self-driving light pole. It can run out of the way when it is about to be struck by a self-driving vehicle. Here is a photo https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Caber_2.jpg

Jan van der Meulen

Software Quality Engineer | TecDoc

8y

It's still a huge difference being involved or causing an accident IMHO.

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