Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Driverless Car Makers, Government Regulators, Face Ethical Dilemma

The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2016 12:11 PM
    OTTAWA — A Canadian expert on the ethics of engineering says governments need to play a greater role in the programming of so-called driverless vehicles.
     
    Carleton University professor Jason Millar says automakers lack the expertise needed to answer questions such as how an autonomous car, truck or bus should swerve to avoid an accident.
     
    Last month's federal budget included $7.3 million over two years to improve motor vehicle safety, with part of that amount going toward developing regulations for automated vehicles.
     
     
    Advocates for the country's high-tech and automotive sectors have urged Ottawa to tread lightly as it moves to create new rules for the autonomous vehicle industry.
     
    But Millar, an engineer who teaches philosophy, says regulators need to come to grips with the complicated ethical and political questions that will emerge as the vehicles start rolling onto roadways.
     
    Although many of the questions remain theoretical, they became more real in February when an autonomous car being tested by Google in California was partly blamed for causing an accident with a bus.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Offers Support To Muslims Who Fear Backlash Over Extremist Acts

    SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is offering words of support for Muslims who fear retaliation for the recent violent attacks by Islamic extremists in Paris and San Bernardino.

    Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Offers Support To Muslims Who Fear Backlash Over Extremist Acts

    World's First Commercial Quantum Computer Really Works: Google

    World's First Commercial Quantum Computer Really Works: Google
    Inside this box is a super conducting chip, cooled to within a fraction of a degree of absolute zero, that might put new power behind artificial-intelligence (AI) software.

    World's First Commercial Quantum Computer Really Works: Google

    Netflix Gives Dvd Workers Better Baby Benefits To Narrow Gap With Its Internet Video Service

    Hourly workers in Netflix's customer service centres are now eligible for paternity leaves with 14 weeks of full pay.

    Netflix Gives Dvd Workers Better Baby Benefits To Narrow Gap With Its Internet Video Service

    Facebook Re-Opens Its Social Network To Rival Service That Pays Its Users For Its Posts

    Facebook Re-Opens Its Social Network To Rival Service That Pays Its Users For Its Posts
    Facebook has lifted a ban that blocked material from Tsu.co, a small rival challenging the world's largest social network's financial dependence on free content shared by its 1.5 billion users.

    Facebook Re-Opens Its Social Network To Rival Service That Pays Its Users For Its Posts

    Australia Police Raid Home Of Man Reported By Media To Be Likely Bitcoin Founder For Tax Probe

    Australia Police Raid Home Of Man Reported By Media To Be Likely Bitcoin Founder For Tax Probe
    SYDNEY, Australia — Australian police on Wednesday raided the home and business premises of a man that technology news sites have claimed is the founder of virtual currency bitcoin.

    Australia Police Raid Home Of Man Reported By Media To Be Likely Bitcoin Founder For Tax Probe

    Yahoo Spinning Its Wheels On Spinoffs As CEO Scrambles To Revive Company's Revenue Growth

    Yahoo Spinning Its Wheels On Spinoffs As CEO Scrambles To Revive Company's Revenue Growth
    Yahoo's long-running identity crisis is spiraling in a new direction now that the company is abandoning a year's work on a tax-dodging spinoff to pursue an alternative path that will carve off its Internet business instead.

    Yahoo Spinning Its Wheels On Spinoffs As CEO Scrambles To Revive Company's Revenue Growth