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Consumer Watchdog

Privacy

Consumer Watchdog investigations and advocacy on data privacy, surveillance, AI, and your right to control your personal information.
For Self-Driving Cars, Privacy May Be Bigger Concern Than Safety

For Self-Driving Cars, Privacy May Be Bigger Concern Than Safety

<p>Companies racing to develop self-driving cars for American roads have hit their first potholes. <a class="injectedLinkmain" href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/google/">Google</a> acknowledged Monday its self-driving vehicles have been involved in four <a class="injectedLinkmain" href="http://www.autoblog.com/tag/crash/">car accidents</a> since September and 11 overall during six years of testing. Global automotive supplier Delphi said its <a class="injectedLinkmain" href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/autonomous/">autonomous cars</a> have been involved in one minor accident.
Local Consumers Group Questions Safety Of Google’s Driverless Cars

Local Consumers Group Questions Safety Of Google’s Driverless Cars

<p><span class="timesDatelineBlack">May 13, 2015</span> -- While tech companies scramble to develop a new generation of driverless cars, one local consumer advocacy group says not so fast.</p> <p>Santa Monica-based Consumer Watchdog on Tuesday raised safety concerns about the budding technology and called on Google to provide the public with details of 11 collisions involving Google’s conceptual driverless cars.</p>
Humans At Fault In Self-Driving Car Crashes

Humans At Fault In Self-Driving Car Crashes

<p>The riskiest thing about self-driving vehicles may turn out to be human drivers.</p> <p>Four of the nearly 50 self-driving cars undergoing tests on California roads since September, when the state began issuing permits to auto companies, have crashed.</p> <p>But the cars, three owned by Google and one by Delphi, were in collisions caused by human error.</p> <p>Driver inattention was behind the collisions involving the Google cars, said Katelin Jabbari, a spokeswoman for the tech giant, which is developing a fleet of autonomous vehicles.</p>
Should Google Give Us the Deets On Its Driverless Car Crashes?

Should Google Give Us the Deets On Its Driverless Car Crashes?

<p>Google wants to take over our highways the way it has taken over the information superhighway. Its driverless cars are a lot closer to road domination than many people think.</p> <p>Back in 2012 Google announced that its robo rides had completed 300,000 miles of test driving without a single accident, making them <a href="http://mashable.com/2012/08/07/google-driverless-cars-safer-than-you/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">safer than the average American driver</a> (who is involved in an accident about every 165,000 miles).</p>
Consumer Group Demands Google To Disclose Driverless-Car Accident Data

Consumer Group Demands Google To Disclose Driverless-Car Accident Data

<div class="copy-paste-block"> <p><span class="dateline">San Francisco — </span>Consumer Watchdog, a California-based group, is calling on Google to release data about accidents involving its driverless cars. The Associated Press reported Monday about several accidents on public highways in California.</p> <p>Carmen Balber, Consumer Watchdog's executive director, is hosting a press conference Tuesday morning in Santa Monica to discuss his group's efforts to discover more information.</p>
Santa Monica Council Unanimously Approves Airbnb Regulations; Hosts To Pay Tax

Santa Monica Council Unanimously Approves Airbnb Regulations; Hosts To Pay Tax

<p class="inaugural">Despite a protest of almost 200 residents, the Santa Monica city council unanimously passed an ordinance Tuesday that will prohibit residents from sharing their place when they're not present.</p> <p>This tough legislation is a first, Airbnb spokesperson Alison Schumer, told KPCC prior to the meeting. </p> <p>"The unnecessarily restrictive proposal would prohibit hosts from sharing their home with guests while the host is out of town — a unique provision which has never before been proposed," Schumer wrote in an email. </p>
Google’s Self-Driving Cars Involved In 11 Crashes

Google’s Self-Driving Cars Involved In 11 Crashes

<p>Google has revealed that its driverless cars have been involved in accidents 11 times, but says all the collisions were caused by other drivers.</p> <p>The accidents were all "minor", meaning light damage and no injuries, Chris Urmson, director of Google's self-driving car program, <a href="https://medium.com/backchannel/the-view-from-the-front-seat-of-the-google-self-driving-car-46fc9f3e6088">said on Monday</a>.</p> <p>"Not once was the self-driving car the cause of the accident," Urmson wrote.</p>
Self-Driving Cars Involved In Accidents In California

Self-Driving Cars Involved In Accidents In California

<p>Four of the nearly 50 self-driving cars now rolling around California have gotten into accidents since September, when the state began issuing permits for companies to test them on public roads.<br /> <br /> Two accidents happened while the cars were in control. In the other two a human was driving, a person familiar with the accident reports told <em>The Associated Press</em>. All four accidents involved speeds of less than 10 mph.<br /> <br />
Google Acknowledges 11 Accidents With Its Self-Driving Cars

Google Acknowledges 11 Accidents With Its Self-Driving Cars

<div id="content-body-16194926-20651880"> <p>Google Inc. revealed Monday that its self-driving cars have been in 11 minor traffic accidents since it began experimenting with the technology six years ago.</p> <p>The company released the number after The Associated Press reported that Google had notified California of three collisions involving its self-driving cars since September, when reporting all accidents became a legal requirement as part of the permits for the tests on public roads.</p>