U.S. House of Representatives passes new bipartisan self-driving car bill

U.S. House of Representatives passes new bipartisan self-driving car bill

7 years ago
Anonymous $wKBR2uNMvM

https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/06/u-s-house-of-representatives-passes-new-bipartisan-self-driving-car-bill/

The U.S. House approved a bill called the SELF-DRIVE act, which was put together bot both Democrats and Republicans – a rarity in today’s congressional goings-on. If it becomes law (which still requires it to pass the Senate), then it would make it possible for companies working on self-driving to field a lot more vehicles per year – as many as 100,000 autonomous test cars annually, in fact.

Basically, the proposed bill would make it possible for companies including Ford, Waymo, GM’s Cruise and others to bypass some safety standards that currently apply to human piloted cars, including requirements like that they have steering wheels and gas pedals on board. This legislation would also supersede state-by-state rules, making it possible for autonomous testing to proceed on a level playing field across the U.S.

U.S. House of Representatives passes new bipartisan self-driving car bill

Sep 6, 2017, 5:25pm UTC
https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/06/u-s-house-of-representatives-passes-new-bipartisan-self-driving-car-bill/ >The U.S. House approved a bill called the SELF-DRIVE act, which was put together bot both Democrats and Republicans – a rarity in today’s congressional goings-on. If it becomes law (which still requires it to pass the Senate), then it would make it possible for companies working on self-driving to field a lot more vehicles per year – as many as 100,000 autonomous test cars annually, in fact. >Basically, the proposed bill would make it possible for companies including Ford, Waymo, GM’s Cruise and others to bypass some safety standards that currently apply to human piloted cars, including requirements like that they have steering wheels and gas pedals on board. This legislation would also supersede state-by-state rules, making it possible for autonomous testing to proceed on a level playing field across the U.S.