Google’s autonomous vehicle program has achieved a significant milestone as it moves closer to being production-ready.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has told the high-tech firm that the artificial intelligence system used in its prototype vehicles can be considered the same as a human driver according to federal regulations.
Google had sought that ruling in a letter sent to NHTSA last November in which it claimed the vehicles have “no need for a human driver.” The high-tech project is in the midst of rolling out about 100 specially designed prototypes designed to test the latest version of Google self-driving technology under real-world conditions. The company wants to remove even the traditional steering wheel and pedals from some of those prototypes.
“We agree with Google its (self-driving car) will not have a ‘driver’ in the traditional sense that vehicles have had drivers during the last more than one hundred years,” NHTSA stated in a letter to Google that it also posted on the agency’s website, reports the Reuters news service.
NHTSA’s ruling could make it easier for Google to move forward with its autonomous vehicle program, considered by many experts to be the most advanced in the industry. The subsidiary of holding company Alphabet recently announced plans to expand its test program – now centered around Google campuses in Silicon Valley and Austin, Texas. It hopes to get broader geographic experience and to learn how the vehicles perform in more varied weather conditions.
A handful of states, including California, Nevada, Florida and Michigan, have specifically established autonomous vehicle guidelines. Some others, such as Texas, have said existing rules apply. The NHTSA ruling could create a potential conflict, however, as proposed regulations recently announced by California authorities would prevent Google from fielding its completely driverless vehicles, those with no mechanical driver controls at all. A passenger would only be able to enter a destination or hit a shutoff button in event of an emergency.
NHTSA cautioned that it has not yet decided whether Google can eliminate all vehicle safety systems that would normally be available for a human driver, however, such as a foot-operated brake pedal.
“The intricate maze of legal questions surrounding autonomous vehicles is as big a hurdle to their arrival as the remaining technological challenges,” said Karl Brauer, an analyst with Kelley Blue Book. “However, if NHTSA is prepared to name artificial intelligence as a viable alternative to human-controlled vehicles, it could substantially streamline the process of putting autonomous vehicles on the road.”
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