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OpieCunningham | 5 years ago

Any non-AV driver seen doing even 1/4 of what FSD did in that video would have been pulled over and fined. Regardless of their personal driving history. When FSD does cause an accident, the driver who enabled it can also be charged with more severe offenses.

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aeternum|5 years ago

Do you drive in the city much? Many of the traffic rules that can be strongly enforced in rural and suburban areas cannot be followed in cities.

You frequently have to enter the other land, cross a yellow line, or turn into a different lane because of double parked cars or construction.

camjohnson26|5 years ago

This is not behavior consistent with experienced driving, it’s the opposite. In cities you have to know when to follow the rules and when it’s safer to break them. At one point in the video the car stops behind double parked cars and doesn’t know enough to go around them. At another point it happily drives on the wrong side of the road, completely unaware of what it’s doing. All this behavior is incredibly dangerous and if I saw another driver doing that I would stay far away. With this many close calls I don’t believe that there have been no crashes or fender benders, no matter what Elon says.

OpieCunningham|5 years ago

I’ve lived and driven in cities my entire life. If I was a police officer and saw any single event captured in that video I’d keep my eye on the vehicle. The vehicle in that video repeatedly followed up questionable activity with additional questionable activity. It was inexcusable reckless driving. As a human I have zero doubt that many combinations of events in that video would have resulted in my being pulled over and potentially fined. That the driver in the video wasn’t pulled over was simply luck that there were few (1 to my count) police in his proximity. But the video was publicly broadcast and the human is ultimately responsible for the activity of the vehicle they control. So that driver should be fined.