My concern is that the driving software etc will become so good that it is made mandatory that it be used at all times, no matter what. That there will be no option available to the humans involved. And heavy penalties for disabling or over-riding the system - assuming that in a non-human controlled vehicle it will be possible to disable the system and take over.

I strongly recommend Haim Harari's paper /Thinking about people who think like machines/published as pages 434-437 of/What to think about machines that think; today's leading thinkers on the Age of Machine Intelligence. /(John Brockman, editor. 2015, Harper Perennial). It includes: //
/

/// "Our human society is moving fast toward rules, regulations, laws, political dogmas, and patterns of behaviour that blindly follow strict logic, even when they start with false foundations or collide with obvious common sense. ... These and similar trends are moving us toward more algorithmic and logical modes of tackling problems, often at the expense of common sense. If common sense, whatever its definition, describes one of the advantages of people over machines, what we see today is a clear move away from this incremental asset of humans."

Mike Shearer, Townsville

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