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Consumer Watchdog investigations and advocacy on data privacy, surveillance, AI, and your right to control your personal information.
Safety Rules Are Still Being Formed As Self-Driving Technology Marches Ahead

Safety Rules Are Still Being Formed As Self-Driving Technology Marches Ahead

<p>The top U.S. highway safety regulator, Mark Rosekind, last month said of self-driving cars: “We are literally seeing the future being created in front of us.”</p> <p>Uber Technologies Inc. and Ford Motor Co. this week proved Rosekind’s point. They announced plans to roll out autonomous vehicles and thus heightened a key question facing Rosekind and other regulators: What will be the rules of the road for these cars?</p> <p>The short answer: It’s not clear yet.</p>
Uber Partners With Volvo, Buys Truck Firm in Race for Autonomous Vehicles

Uber Partners With Volvo, Buys Truck Firm in Race for Autonomous Vehicles

<div class="entry-content"> <p>Uber Technologies Inc. expanded its push to develop self-driving cars on Thursday, announcing its acquisition of driverless truck firm Ottomotto LLC and a partnership with Volvo Cars, making Uber the latest U.S. company to accelerate the race toward offering a ride-sharing service powered by self-driving cars.</p>
Fatal Tesla Crash Recharges Self-Driving Criticism

Fatal Tesla Crash Recharges Self-Driving Criticism

<p><i>Washington</i> — A spate of crashes involving Tesla cars equipped with Autopilot driver-assist software has emboldened consumer groups to push federal regulators to pump the brakes on rules governing self-driving vehicles.</p> <p>The safety advocates say the fatal accident involving a 2015 Tesla Model S with Autopilot engaged that occurred in May has cast doubt on the viability of self-driving cars among potential consumers.</p>
DHS Invokes Silicon Valley for More Drones

DHS Invokes Silicon Valley for More Drones

<p><strong>A group of federal regulators held a meeting in Menlo Park, Calif., asking for help in monitoring the country's southern border with drones.</strong></p> <p>Last week, technology entrepreneurs filled a Menlo Park conference room, where officials spelled out their needs — drones small and light enough to launch easily and fly over vast stretches of desert. The machines would look for questionable activity, scan faces of suspects and compare them against a database for prior criminal history.</p>
Ignoring Deadly Defects In Autonomous Cars Serves No One, Say Auto Safety Advocates

Ignoring Deadly Defects In Autonomous Cars Serves No One, Say Auto Safety Advocates

<p>The US Center for Auto Safety, Consumer Watchdog and former National Highway Traffic Administration (NHTSA) administrator Joan Claybrook have told NHTSA administrator Mark Rosekind that "you inexcusably are rushing full speed ahead" to promote the deployment of self-driving robot car technology instead of developing adequate safety standards "crucial to ensuring imperfect technologies do not kill people by being introduced into vehicles before the technology matures."</p>
Consumer Groups: Self-Driving Car Occupants Are Guinea Pigs

Consumer Groups: Self-Driving Car Occupants Are Guinea Pigs

<p>The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the Obama administration want self-driving cars on the roads as soon as possible, but not everyone is in such a rush. Auto safety organizations say the government is rushing autonomous technology into cars without safety rules necessary for the technology.</p>
Self-driving cars’ fatal attraction

Self-driving cars’ fatal attraction

<p><img class=" alignright size-full wp-image-2939" alt="" src="https://consumerwatchdog.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/images_teslatruckpc_0.jpeg" style="width: 275px; height: 206px; margin-left: 7px; margin-right: 7px; float: right;" width="640" height="480" />Obama administration officials’ love affair with self-driving cars is so blinding that even a fatal crash – caused when a Tesla in autopilot mode failed to "see" a white truck against a bright sky – has failed to slow their rush to deploy robot cars on public highways.</p>
Feds: Tesla Crashes Won’t Slow Self-Driving Push

Feds: Tesla Crashes Won’t Slow Self-Driving Push

<p><i>Washington</i> – Federal regulators have not lost their enthusiasm for self-driving cars after a series of crashes involving Tesla vehicles that were operating with their automated driving system activated, the nation's top highway safety official said Wednesday.</p>
Data, Public Perception and the Tesla Crash: Exploring Options for the Self-Driving Car Industry

Data, Public Perception and the Tesla Crash: Exploring Options for the Self-Driving Car Industry

<p><b>In order to put self-driving cars on the streets, auto makers must first prove themselves, speakers at an automated driving convention have argued.</b></p> <p>SAN FRANCISCO — It was only mentioned a couple of times, and still the looming specter of Tesla Motors’ first death while one of its cars was in self-driving mode hung over the 2016 Automated Driving Symposium’s first full day of discussion.</p>