"It affects all of us because we are essentially experiments in public roads."
Tesla Whistleblower Says 'Autopilot' System Is Not Safe Enough To Be Used On Public Roads::"It affects all of us because we are essentially experiments in public roads."
I know it's not the answer you're looking for but, what is safer for pedestrians, cyclists and other drivers, is to have less cars on the roads. Buses can move dozens of people with a single trained professional driver. Trains can move hundreds. It's illogical to try to push for autonomous cars for individuals when we already have "self driving" technologies that are much much safer and much more efficient.
Being "anti car" is good for people that love cars. More public transit means less trafic, less congestion, less demand for gas and generally just more space for people that actually like to drive cars.
Plus, if some people don't want to drive a car and just want to get places, maybe don't get a car? There's already safe and proven "technology" to do that. I understand the added safety bonus of "autonomous" cars but let's be real, it's not advertised as something to boost the safety of everyone around, it's advertised as "autopilot" or even worse, "Full Self Driving".
I am certainly anti car, but pointing out the flaws in "FSD" or "autonomous cars" and how it's being falsely marketed to people is also on topic and is not exactly "inserting my views". People can still love cars and use them, just don't BS us with the "FSD" and "autonomous" spiel.
Someone paying proper attention probably would be. But a huge chunk of accidents happen because idiots are looking at their phones or fall asleep on the wheel, and at least a self driving cars, even Teslas on Autopilot, won't do that.
We aren’t at the point yet — with any self-drive car — where you should be behind the wheel unless you’re absolutely capable of taking over in seconds.
If you are referring to autopilot, yeah, technically it does that - it turns off once it realises it can't do anything anymore to avoid the collision so that it doesn't speed off afterwards due to damaged sensor or glitches etc. But the whole "autopilot turns off so it doesn't show in statistics" was a blatant lie as Tesla counts all crashes where it has been on before the crash.
We also receive a crash alert anytime a crash is reported to us from the fleet, which may include data about whether Autopilot was active at the time of impact. To ensure our statistics are conservative, we count any crash in which Autopilot was deactivated within 5 seconds before impact, and we count all crashes in which the incident alert indicated an airbag or other active restraint deployed.
https://www.tesla.com/en_eu/VehicleSafetyReport
In the case the crash happened later than 5 seconds after Autopilot was disabled, or it was never used in the first place, it would be in the "Tesla vehicles not using autopilot technology" part of the data.
As for automatically detecting not-crashes, that's a bit harder to do don't ya think?