I disagree because we're comparing what this individual driver would have done without a feature advertised as Autopilot.
I'm a partner in an auto insurance company, and most of our no-accident records will stay that way, statistically speaking.
If this driver had a one in a billion miles chance of crashing and Autopilot (with an inattentve driver, as they all tend to be) had a one in a million miles chance, then Autopilot is decreasing safety.
At a certain level of safety, Autopilot would make everyone safer, but it's definitely not there yet.
I didn't say that I knew. I was only disputing the relevance of defending individual Tesla crashes by saying that Tesla's are, on average, less likely to crash when on Autopilot. You can't compare Tesla drivers on Autopilot to all drivers -- you have to compare them to themselves, or you have an extraneous variable.
Fatal human accidents are on the order of 1-10 every billion miles of driving in the US, yes. Tesla Autopilot crashes seem to be much, much, much more common.
I'm a partner in an auto insurance company, and most of our no-accident records will stay that way, statistically speaking.
If this driver had a one in a billion miles chance of crashing and Autopilot (with an inattentve driver, as they all tend to be) had a one in a million miles chance, then Autopilot is decreasing safety.
At a certain level of safety, Autopilot would make everyone safer, but it's definitely not there yet.