Comment by ssl-3

2 days ago

I mean: I haven't implemented a cat-friendly update to my own driving, and it isn't clear to me how I would ever begin to attempt to do so.

I’d bet you already have a mode that would’ve prevented what happened to the cat. From NYT reporting on the actual incident:

A human driver, she believes, would have stopped and asked if everything was OK after seeing a concerned person kneeling in front of their car and peering underneath.

“I didn’t know if I should reach out and hit one of the cameras or scream,” she said of the perilous moment. “I sort of froze, honestly. It was disorienting that Waymo was pulling away with me so close to it.”

  • I watched the video and read the article. (I wish I didn't; I love cats. I've known some wonderful bodega cats myself.)

    But I'll bet I already have a mode that makes me want to drive away from people I don't know who are acting weird around my car.

    I mean: I've got options. I can fight, flee, or hang out and investigate.

    But I'm human -- I'm going to make what ultimately turn out to be poor decisions sometimes. I will have this condition until the day I die, and there isn't a single thing I can do about it (except to choose to die sooner, I guess).

    So to posit an example: I'm already behind the wheel of my fleeing-machine with an already-decided intent to leave. And a stranger nearby is being weird.

    I've now got a decision to make. It may be a very important decision, or it may instead be a nearly-meaningless decision.

    Again, I've got options. I may very well decide that fighting isn't a good plan, and that joining them in exploring whatever mystery or ailment they may perceive is also not a great idea, and thereby decide that fleeing is the best option.

    This may be a poor choice. It may also be the very best choice.

    I don't know everything, and I can't see everything, and I do not get to use a time machine to gain hindsight for how this decision will play out.

    (But I might speculate that if I stopped to investigate every time I saw a nearby stranger act weird at night in neighborhoods with prominent security gates that I might have fewer days remaining than if I just left them to their own devices.)

    • That’s an interesting perspective. The way I’ve always approached it is that if someone is looking at my car weird, I should probably ask what’s up. I’ve honked over several cars to let them know their tire is flat, flagged down drivers in parking lots because some dumbass let a ton of nails fall off their work truck, etc. When it comes to cars, someone checking out my car in a “weird” way is a prompt to me to investigate, not flee.

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