Google recently reported 11 minor accidents with its self-driving cars over six years and nearly two million miles driven -- and the company says that none of the scrapes were its fault. That sounds like a solid safety record. But when the first person gets killed because of a decision the Google robot car makes, who will be held responsible for that death?

 

Robot cars will be making their own decisions and in certain situations may have to make decisions detrimental to your life. If the car has to make a decision in a situation involving you and a school bus full of children without seat belts, should the car try to protect you at their expense or vice versa. The car may very well be programmed to sacrifice your well being.  

NEW YORK (TheStreet) --Google (GOOGL - Get Report) recently reported 11 minor accidents with its self-driving cars over six years and nearly two million miles driven -- and the company says that none of the scrapes were its fault. That sounds like a solid safety record. But when the first person gets killed because of a decision the Google robot car makes, who will be held responsible for that death?Should they become popular (and if Carl Icahn and others are right, they will), robot cars will face this scenario a large number of times, as there are more than 5.5 million car accidents in the U.S. every year, resulting in nearly 33,000 deaths, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.Consider the following scenario: The car in front is stopping too rapidly. The self-driving car is blocked from changing lanes due to other traffic. And there is a car approaching very fast from behind without enough time to stop. What decision does the robot car make? Does it plow into the car in front? Does it brake and let the car behind it, hit it? Does it protect its passanger even if it knows its decisions may be fatal for the other individuals? If so, which driver does it choose to take the brunt of the hit? What if one of the vehicles has many passengers? What if one of the vehicles is a school bus?
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Then the question is: If there is a fatality and the robot car had independently made the decision, who is liable for the fatality. Is it the "driver" of the robot car? Is it the robot car itself? Is it the manufacturer of the robot car? Is it the company owning the robot car, if it is a corporate car? Is it the software developer who wrote the program that governed the decision?Must Read: Warren Buffett's 7 Secrets to Dividend InvestingThere is really not a question of whether a robot-responsible fatality will happen. It has already happened. The first recorded death of a human by a robot was in 1979, when an assembly-line worker in a Ford (F) plant was killed instantly when the robot's arm crushed him while they were working side-by-side. His name was Robert Williams and his family was awarded $10 million in 1983 as a result of the accident. There have been other fatalities. And there are hundreds of robot-related accidents every year now.In the case of the Google robot car, none of the accidents were caused by the robot car, Google has said. The robot cars will be safer: They will not be drinking, texting, eating or snoozing while driving. I would personally trust the robot car more than a human driver.When first confronted with a self-driving car, others may not feel the same. In the movie "iRobot," you can see the shock and fear the character played by Will Smith switches his car from automatic to manual: this is likely to be common. (And here's a scary scene with robot cars actually attack.) Google, with its motto "don't be evil," has been testing for years and is likely struggling with these questions. But I am not so sure about the other robot car manufacturers. Will they design their self-driving cars to make the same set of decisions?
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