Tech

Google ditched self-driving car feature after users napped behind wheel

Alphabet Inc.’s self-driving car unit stopped developing features that required drivers to take control in dangerous situations after experiments showed test users napping, putting on makeup and fiddling with their phones as the vehicles traveled up to 56 mph.

“What we found was pretty scary,” John Krafcik, the head of Alphabet’s Waymo unit, said on Monday during a media tour of the startup’s testing facility. “It’s hard to take over because they have lost contextual awareness.”

In tests it ran several years ago, Krafcik said the company determined a system that asked drivers to jump in at the sound of an alert was unsafe after seeing videos from inside self-driving cars.

The filmed tests were conducted in 2013, with Google employees behind the wheel. The videos had not been publicly shown until Monday’s event, Waymo spokeswoman Lauren Barriere said.

A couple of days after the napping incident, the company decided to focus solely on technology that didn’t require human intervention, said Krafcik, who joined as CEO in 2015. It has also since argued against allowing “handoffs” between automated driving systems and people.

“Our technology takes care of all of the driving, allowing passengers to stay passengers,” the company said in report this month.

Waymo is running a ride-hailing pilot program around Phoenix, Arizona that chauffeurs an undisclosed, but growing number of users in self-driving cars. The service area is limited to well-mapped roads on which Waymo has extensively tested.

The two drive controls provided to passengers in Waymo’s Chrysler Pacifica minivans are buttons for starting a ride and asking the vehicles to pull over at their next chance.

Krafcik declined to specify when the company would expand beyond the small experiment, saying only that such a moment is getting “close.”

He reiterated that the company is simultaneously also identifying ways to launch self-driving trucks, municipal transit services and partnerships with carmakers.

“We see four potential applications, whether it’s Waymo branded or not,” he said.

With Reuters