Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-12-19 23:07:46| Engadget

Waymos fleet of driverless vehicles are operating in more cities and a study indicates that may reduce crashes on roadways. The study, a non-paid partnership between Waymo itself and reinsurer Swiss Re, indicated Waymos cars result in fewer insurance claims than those operated by people. Swiss Re analyzed liability claims from collisions covering 25.3 million miles driven by Waymos autonomous cars. The study also compared Waymos liability claims to human driver baselines based on data from over 500,000 claims and over 200 billion driving miles. The results found that Waymo Driver demonstrated better safety performance when compared to human-driver vehicles.. The study found cars operated by Alphabets Waymo Driver resulted in 88 percent fewer property damage claims and 92 percent fewer bodily injury claims. Swiss Re also invented a new metric to compare Waymo Driver against only newer vehicles with advanced safety tech, like driver assistance, automated emergency braking and blind spot warning systems, instead of against the whole corpus of those 200 billion driving miles. In this comparison, Waymo still came out ahead with an 86 percent reduction in property damage claims and a 90 percent reduction on bodily damage claims. Of course, there are two glaring issues. First is that Waymo currently only operates in cities, which, yes, account for the bulk of crashes in the US, but rural areas account for a much higher number of crashes (especially fatal ones) proportional to their population. (The study, incidentally, states that having exurban data included in the baseline metrics actually cuts against Waymo's true safety numbers.) Second: Waymo simply hasn't been around that long. It's very hard to get an accurate measure of the system when its real-world testing period has been so relatively short. The numbers may look good for Waymo Driver in studies but they arent perfect by any stretch. Waymo issued its second recall over the summer when one of its robotaxis hit a street level telephone pole at 8 mph in Phoenix. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration launched an investigation into Waymo and found 24 incidents that involved crashes or traffic violations.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/waymos-driverless-cars-are-apparently-an-insurance-companys-dream-220746643.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

27.02The PS5 Pro is getting upgraded upscaling tech in March
27.02Google and OpenAI employees sign open letter in solidarity with Anthropic
27.02Heres your first look at Kratos and Atreus in Amazons upcoming God of War TV adaptation
27.02OpenAI secures another $110 billion in funding from Amazon, NVIDIA and SoftBank
27.02NASA overhauls Artemis program, delaying Moon landing to 2028
27.02Celebrate Pokémons 30th anniversary with this Game Boy-shaped music player
27.02Pokémon Winds and Waves are coming to Switch 2 in 2027
27.02Engadget Podcast: Xbox's leadership shakeup and Samsung's Galaxy S26
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

27.02Stocks Lower into Afternoon on AI Industry Disruption Worries, Earnings Outlook Jitters, Rising Credit Angst, Financial/Alt Energy Sector Weakness
27.02Weekly Scoreboard*
27.02The PS5 Pro is getting upgraded upscaling tech in March
27.02Sam Altman backs rival Anthropic in fight with Pentagon
27.02Google and OpenAI employees sign open letter in solidarity with Anthropic
27.02What Makes This Trade Great: Let the Re-Entry Do the Heavy Lifting $ONMD
27.02The $12.5 Billion Fraud Crisis: How AI and Social Media Are Fueling Financial Crime
27.02Nepal votes on March 5; focus on jobs, economy
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .