Seeing Like a Tesla: How Can We Anticipate Self-Driving Worlds?

J. Stilgoe
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

In the last five years, investment and innovation in self-driving cars has accelerated dramatically. Automotive autonomy, once seen as impossible, is now sold as inevitable. Much of the governance discussion has centred on risk: will the cars be safer than their human-controlled counterparts? As with conventional cars, harder long-term questions relate to the future worlds that self-driving technologies might enable or even demand. The vision of an autonomous vehicle – able to navigate the world’s complexity using only its sensors and processors – on offer from companies like Tesla is intentionally misleading. So-called “autonomous” vehicles will depend upon webs of social and technical connectivity. For their purported benefits to be realised, infrastructures that were designed around humans will need to be upgraded in order to become machine-readable. It is vital to anticipate the politics of selfdriving worlds in order to avoid exacerbating the inequalities that have emerged around conventional cars. Rather than being dazzled by the Tesla view, policymakers should start seeing like a city, from multiple perspectives. Good governance for selfdriving cars means democratising experimentation and creating genuine collaboration between companies and local governments.
像特斯拉一样看:我们如何预测自动驾驶世界?
在过去的五年里,自动驾驶汽车的投资和创新急剧加速。曾经被视为不可能的汽车自动驾驶,现在被视为不可避免的。许多关于治理的讨论都集中在风险上:自动驾驶汽车会比人类驾驶的汽车更安全吗?与传统汽车一样,更棘手的长期问题与自动驾驶技术可能实现甚至需要的未来世界有关。像特斯拉这样的公司所提供的自动驾驶汽车的愿景——仅仅依靠传感器和处理器就能驾驭世界的复杂性——是有意误导的。所谓的“自动”车辆将依赖于社交和技术连接网络。为了实现它们所谓的好处,围绕人类设计的基础设施将需要升级,以便成为机器可读的。为了避免加剧围绕传统汽车出现的不平等,预测自动驾驶世界的政治形势至关重要。政策制定者不应该被特斯拉的观点弄得眼花缭乱,而应该开始从多个角度来看待一个城市。自动驾驶汽车的良好治理意味着将实验民主化,并在企业和地方政府之间建立真正的合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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