Not sure what you mean? You could still fine the corporation, or block/revoke approvals.
Unsafe/stupid driving is accepted as inevitable and rarely enforced against for human drivers (outside accidents). Not a good thing, but definitely the reality these days. Tbh, it’ll likely be much easier to enforce rules on a self driving car, since almost everything is tracked and recorded. Every mistake can be scrutinized for a self driving car, in ways that would never be required for human drivers.
> You could still fine the corporation, or block/revoke approvals.
If the purpose is to spot bad behavior and then correct it within these systems, then this is as far from achieving that goal as you can get. I'm not interested in penalizing the corporation, I'm interested in getting the best performance we can.
What natural incentives are there otherwise? If users come to expect that their self driving cab "breaks a few rules" to get them there faster, then how do you balance that?
> Unsafe/stupid driving is accepted as inevitable and rarely enforced against for human drivers
What is your source for this assertion?
> it’ll likely be much easier to enforce rules on a self driving car, since almost everything is tracked and recorded
If the car can't correctly drive itself, then what help is this? How would you sort through this data without the very type of automation which is in the car itself?
> in ways that would never be required for human drivers.
There's much more to roadway enforcement than what the U.S. currently does. China has an entirely different system of police and thus traffic enforcement. European countries love speed cameras. Several U.S. states are big on red light cameras.
Self driving vehicles confidently drive down one way streets and block other vehicles offering no recourse to solve the problem for the other driver. We don't have an enforcement mechanism for this because this hasn't happened before.
Whether this technology is "better than humans" or not is beside the point. It's using roadways designed and still majority occupied by actual humans. This is not being properly accounted for.
Unsafe/stupid driving is accepted as inevitable and rarely enforced against for human drivers (outside accidents). Not a good thing, but definitely the reality these days. Tbh, it’ll likely be much easier to enforce rules on a self driving car, since almost everything is tracked and recorded. Every mistake can be scrutinized for a self driving car, in ways that would never be required for human drivers.