일. 4월 28th, 2024

Taxi company – 택시회사

Taxi company – 택시회사

Taxi company

Controversy over self-driving taxis blocking ambulances in the U.S

The scene of Cruise, an unmanned taxi operating in San Francisco, USA.

The New York Times reported on the 2nd (local time) that an autonomous taxi blocked an ambulance and delayed the transfer of the patient, eventually killing a seriously injured person.

The San Francisco Fire Department said it tried to urgently transport the victim

Who was hit by a car in connection with a traffic accident in the

Soma area on the 14th of last month, but the transfer of the patient was delayed as two self-driving taxis blocked the lane.

The self-driving taxi was parked side by side in one lane on a four-lane road.

After that, there was an ambulance, but when the taxi didn’t move

The police car standing in the next lane was pulled 스마트스토어상위노출 out to secure a moving path.

The patient was transferred to a general hospital about 3.8km away from the accident site but was eventually pronounced dead.

Cruise, an autonomous vehicle subsidiary of General Motors in question, is complaining of unfairness.

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The company claimed, “As soon as the victim was loaded into the ambulance

The ambulance immediately left the scene and was never disturbed by an autonomous taxi.”

According to a video released by the company in the New York Times

One out of two self-driving taxis had already left their seats before the victim was placed in an ambulance.

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The other was stopped there, and the patient passed by the taxi 90 seconds after being put in the ambulance.

One self-driving taxi, which remained in its seat until the end

Left the scene only after a police officer contacted the company through a remote support system in the vehicle.

It had already been after the ambulance left.

In response, San Francisco fire authorities point out that the problem is that the autonomous

Driving system is not aware of situations such as emergency patient transfer, saying, “It is a matter of seconds.”

In San Francisco, two companies, Waymo, a subsidiary of Google

And Cruise, a subsidiary of General Motors, have been operating unmanned taxi services since last year with the approval of the state of California.

Currently, about 70 self-driving taxis are in operation, two of which became a problem this time.

San Francisco is demanding to reduce the number of self-driving taxis operating in the city as noise continued

Including an accident in which an autonomous vehicle collided with a fire truck on the 17th.