Should Your Driverless Car Hit a Pedestrian to Save Your Life?
Désolé, ce contenu n'est pas disponible en Français
People say that one day, perhaps in the not-so-distant future, they’d like to be passengers in self-driving cars that are mindful machines doing their best for the common good. Merge politely. Watch for pedestrians in the crosswalk. Keep a safe space.
A new research study, however, indicates that what people really want to ride in is an autonomous vehicle that puts its passengers first. If its machine brain has to choose between slamming into a wall or running someone over, well, sorry, pedestrian.
Read this article in the New York Times.
A new research study, however, indicates that what people really want to ride in is an autonomous vehicle that puts its passengers first. If its machine brain has to choose between slamming into a wall or running someone over, well, sorry, pedestrian.
Read this article in the New York Times.
J'aime
244 vues
Visites
Should Your Driverless Car Hit a Pedestrian to Save Your Life?
2016-06-27 13:42:57
alumni.tse-fr.eu
https://alumni.tse-fr.eu/medias/image/173626469465534a688cc8d.png
2016-06-27 13:43:13
2016-06-27 13:42:57
People say that one day, perhaps in the not-so-distant future, they’d like to be passengers in self-driving cars that are mindful machines doing their best for the common good. Merge politely. Watch for pedestrians in the crosswalk. Keep a safe space.
A new research study, however, indicates that what people really want to ride in is an autonomous vehicle that puts its passengers first. If its machine brain has to choose between slamming into a wall or running someone over, well, sorry, pedestrian.
Read this article in the New York Times.
https://alumni.tse-fr.eu/medias/image/thumbnail_118496715665ef2313982c7.jpeg
Commentaires0
Veuillez vous connecter pour lire ou ajouter un commentaire
Articles suggérés