As a general rule, I do not adhere to the belief that human choices have machine delegable responsibilities.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑02 May 2019, 00:58If they can put it in drive then it isn't an autonomous car, is it?
A truly autonomous car would be one where you get in and say "take me to work" and the car does everything. At that point, the car is the driver and the person is a mere passenger. At that point the person in the car can not be guilty of any action carried out by the car.
If people are required to be involved in the driving process, whether that's having a stop button or required to hold a "dead man's handle", then the driver may be culpable, perhaps jointly with car, in any accident. If the accident is the rest of the driver being too drunk to hit the stop button when the car's systems fail, then he should be liable. If there is no button then he should not be liable, liability would rest with some other party, whether that's the manufacturer or someone else is for the courts to decide.
If an accident occurs that can traced to a fault in the vehicle caused by the manufacturer, then the manufacturer should be held liable.
Just getting into the car, and giving a command to commence transportation, puts the responsibility for the machines action on the operator, even if the only operation is giving a command such as "take me to work".