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scott00 | 2 years ago
But the obvious way to prove this, to me anyway, is to run a randomized controlled trial. Put them in a dispatch system with human driven cars, randomize whether any given assignment goes to a human or a robot, and you've got the statistical gold standard.
Anybody understand why they're not doing this?
crazygringo|2 years ago
It's easy enough to simply compare with existing Uber in the same city along the same roads and get something nearly as accurate for virtually none of the cost.
scott00|2 years ago
The comparison with Uber depends strongly on how similar the dispatch profiles are, and I would not be quick to assume that they are similar. If they are limiting the self-driving cars due to weather, or time of day, or any property of trip type it could easily have a substantial impact.
yazaddaruvala|2 years ago
https://waymo.com/blog/2023/05/waymo-and-uber-partner-to-bri...
s1artibartfast|2 years ago
scott00|2 years ago
I believe that you are correct that scale is too low for analyzing injuries or deaths.
unknown|2 years ago
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