Well, hopefully the company's actions will be to open the doors, tell the passengers to get out, and then run over the police, open the doors, and tell the poor guy on the street:
In the video, officers can be heard yelling at the Waymo to clear the area. Instead it did the exact opposite, slowing to a crawl and trying to sidle up to the curb, right near where the suspect was being held at gunpoint.
“Go to your left! Go to your left!” an officer can be heard yelling as the driverless cab throws its right-side blinker on. Of course, the Waymo doesn’t respond to outside verbal commands....a company spokesperson told NBC that... "When we encounter unusual events like this one, we learn from them as we continue improving road safety and operating in dynamic cities.”
I hope their takeaway isn't to let thugs barking orders at cars dictate what the car should do.
I appreciate that the car understood not to follow the demands of some uniformed gangster standing in the road with a gun pointed at some dude on the ground.
I wish people would be as anarchist as this car. Fuck the police
That's not a fucking standoff wtf. That's some dude laying flat on the ground as a bunch of heavily arm thugs bark orders at him, threatening him with lethal violence if he doesn't lay on the ground like a dog.
Jesus futurism, wtf is this narrative
builder.ai has been tricking customers and investors for eight years – selling an advanced code-writing AI that, it turns out, is actually an Indian software farm employing 700 human developers
builder.ai has been tricking customers and investors for eight years – selling an advanced code-writing AI that, it turns out, is actually an Indian software farm employing 700 human developers
I don't think that's true. I believe there was one guy who stole a truck and went across state boundaries?
There are probably a few that have been arrested so far, and I wish the media would report in this. The narrative should make it clear that they're criminals, yet the efforts to stop their activities are lacking
Linking to outside content is good. How else could people cite their sources?