Self-Driving Cars Are Coming to the U.K. Early Next Year

The U.K. government just announced that driverless cars will be hitting public roads less than half a year from now. The Department of Transport (DOT) had previously planned to allow autonomous cars on the road in late 2013, but they just announced that January 2015 will be the first time someone can take an autonomous car out for a spin.
Vince Cable, the U.K.'s business secretary, recently unveiled the new plan at an automotive engineering firm called Mira, saying:
"Today's announcement will see driverless cars take to our streets in less than six months, putting us at the forefront of this transformational technology and opening up new opportunities for our economy and society."
The U.K. DOT also invited three cities to partake in trials as volunteers starting next year. Ten million euros will be divided between the three cities to help cover the costs. Researchers at Oxford University have been experimenting with the cars over the past couple years.
Despite the many potential benefits of self-driving cars, such as the elimination of human negligence and decrease in traffic congestion, there has been some pushback from government agencies. The Guardian uncovered objections from the FBI through Freedom of Information Act requests. Officials claimed in a report that:
"Autonomy … will make mobility more efficient, but will also open up greater possibilities for dual-use applications and ways for a car to be more of a potential lethal weapon that it is today."
Despite the government's quibbles, countries around the world are exploring driverless cars. Here in the U.S., California, Nevada, Florida, Michigan, and the District of Columbia have all passed laws regarding self-driving cars, and potential legislation is on the docket in more states. In Japan, Nissan started testing their self-driving cars in 2013. A city in Sweden has permitted Volvo to test 100 driverless cars, but those experiments won't be taking place until 2017.
Google's autonomous vehicles alone have already travelled 700,000 miles after getting permission from Nevada to test their technology on public roads. They have gone all of those miles with only getting in one crash, which happened when a driver ran into the back of them.
Read Ron Bailey's The Moral Case for Self-Driving Cars.
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So what bullshit pretext will dui patrols have to fabricate to stop a Designated Droid?
*** smash ***
"Your taillight's out, R2D2."
With the sensors and cameras on an autodrive car?
Knowing there are cameras they'll just rip out the hard drive while searching for drugs or for "safety". And it will be a caught drunk so there will be no sympathy. Obviously they haven't been trained on the difference between digital storage and a weapon. And obviously it requires destructive dissection to determine if it is safe.
Florida would be the best place to test driverless cars, given the lack of grade and the dystopian hellhole that is its current road network.
Don't forget dodging the gray hairs...
Wooohoooo! I'm buyin' a bar. Happy Hour is back!
I somehow doubt that driverless cars will bring happy hour back to Boston... Despite the rationale against it being that it causes too many drunk drivers.
Yes, let's say we go completely automated vehicle by, say 2030. How long before laws against alcohol in vehicles get repealed? Fifty years?
Depends. Are we really having a libertarian moment and will it continue.
Never thought weed would be legal, but it's happening.
"Autonomy ? will make mobility more efficient, but will also open up greater possibilities for dual-use applications and ways for a car to be more of a potential lethal weapon that it is today."
It might be used, for instance, to take out a Paki wedding party.
Yes, one thing that bugs me about automated cars is the total certainty that the government will have a backdoor into the controls. Not just tracking but driving.
The U.K. government just announced that driverless cars will be hitting public roads less than half a year 20 years from now.
FTFY. As we all know, technology is always only 20 years away.
Paul Best? Who voted on this? I mean, technically you have alt-text, so you clearly aren't Paul Worst (plus Nicole still exists), but Best seems a bit premature. You're going to have to start chatting with commenters, upping your alt-text game, and skipping the editong staged to earn that.
You're pathetic. Pathetic. He gives you Paul Best and no Pete Best/Beatles jokes?
First of all, the foundation of the Beatles happened so long ago that Voyager hadn't left the atmosphere, let alone the solar system. And these interns are (I assume) younger than me, let alone an Elder like yourself.
Also, come on, a music joke or a Nicole is the worst joke. I think it's obvious which way to go.
I'd say the Beatles are well known enough that you know who Pete Best is without me or Google telling you.
Actually I didn't. I would have if it was Starr.
Self-driving cars will exchange insurance information via Bluetooth.
I had not thought of that. What will the implications be for insurance companies? Would it not severely reduce insurance premiums?
I can see the buggy whip and saddle manufacturers taking to the streets over this.
Sounds like the Stig is going to be hitting the welfare line.
When will these things come to 18 wheel tractors. A bunch of long haul drivers out of a job.
I just can't wait for the iPeterbilt to hit the road to compete with the Windows Kenworth
Hopefully the Brits did not include the equivalent of square windows on a jetliner in this software.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Comet