Busted: Google Auto-Pilot Car Breaks Traffic Law

When I read the headline on Jalopnik I immediately thought of the recent runaway train movie “Unstoppable.” Did one of the systems fail; did the vehicle run a red light; did it hit another car? Nope. None of the above. What actually happened, apparently, is the “driver” got a ticket for talking on a cell […]

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When I read the headline on Jalopnik I immediately thought of the recent runaway train movie “Unstoppable.” Did one of the systems fail; did the vehicle run a red light; did it hit another car?

Nope. None of the above.

What actually happened, apparently, is the “driver” got a ticket for talking on a cell phone, which is against the law in California while driving without a hands-free unit (per CA vehicle code section 23123).

There was no actual violation by the car itself. The guy behind the wheel thought he got a pass and so was chatting away when “Johnny Law” pulled the car over.

Picture 22

Credit: Jalopnik

Cut to the year 2020: “It wasn’t me officer, it was the car . . . it was driving.”

To that future excuse on the autopia, the law in California already has an answer. It will treat the self-driving car like a version of cruise control and still hold the driver accountable for all moving violations.

Here’s one instance where the law doesn’t have to catch up to technology.

Postscript: I made the incorrect assumption that the driver had been pulled over — apparently he hadn’t.


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About the author

Greg Sterling
Contributor
Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land, a member of the programming team for SMX events and the VP, Market Insights at Uberall.

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