A driverless automotive that went rogue might be a style of the robo rebellion

The latest case of a driverless automotive that attempted to flee its handlers may make us chuckle, however it additionally warns us about what may occur when AI is given a "physique", writes Annalee Newitz

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DRIVING in San Francisco is like watching a robotic rebellion within the making. Final week, I used to be crossing an intersection, turning from one main downtown thoroughfare onto one other, and realised that my car was surrounded by 4 experimental self-driving automobiles.

They weren’t precisely troublesome to identify, their bumpers encrusted with radar and different sensors, their roofs topped by monumental lidar rigs, together with bulbous, whirling cameras formed like turrets.

These sorts of automobiles aren’t unusual in San Francisco and Silicon Valley to the south of the town. However their numbers are rising quick, bringing many questions with them. The California Division of Motor Automobiles reported that …


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