Post
by jup » Fri Aug 28, 2015 4:45 am
Actually, I saw a totally different approach to how self driving cars might out date our traditional cars.
Alright. Image if taxi services started running fleets of self drivers. To opt in to one of these, people pay a low, monthly subscription fee. After all, we all pay to drive, anyhow. We must buy fuel on a regular basis. (Or a few lucky types buy electricity.) Cars need insurance in some places and licensing fees. Vehicles eventually need repairs. It all adds up. And, there's also other inconveniences about owning cars. (Like finding parking spaces.) So, what if this service does away with many of the inconveniences? When you want to go somewhere, you use your SmartPhone app and 'request' a ride. If the system works well enough, a self driving taxi is only minutes...if not seconds away. You go where you want to with a minimal conflict time. (Now, owning your own car would cut down on that wait time, for sure. But, we're talking savings, here.) This would work as self drivers are always out there, roaming the roads and awaiting pick up orders. You don't have to worry about parking spaces or car costs/maintenance, as the taxi service handles all that. Imagine never having to drive the kids to school or a sports event or some other activity, ever again. Just let them 'dial a ride' via this taxi service, where they will always get to where they are going, safe and sound. (The way this world is getting, a parent can probably access a public service via their phone that tracks their kids via a vast array of traffic cameras and such at a future point.) And, once arriving, you just go about your way and so does the car...probably to another dialed in ride request. Any cleaning, maintenance, refills or anything else the car needs (like keeping anti-virus up-to-date and insurance needs) rides on the taxi service and not the individual. Imagine if a new generation grows up, preferring to pay $50 a month for an unlimited amount of passenger service miles, (Provided that these cars can always arrive 'clean''; without issues that public buses/trains might have. After all, a computerized taxi could have sensors that say it's become 'dirty' or vandalized and automatically switch to an off-duty mode in order to return to base for maintenance.) the very notion of actually owning a car might be seen as 'luxury' or even 'ancient'. Just imagine never having to stop at a gas pump, ever again. (Why, just stopping at a gas pump, these days, can run that $50.)
If a notion such as that were to catch on, it could do the same thing to personal cars as cel-phones did to pay phones. Sure would kill off a lot of car related businesses, too. (Insurance agencies would suffer. Gas stations would close and become only a few scattered buildings. Auto parts would go out of business. Salvage yards might survive via car collector enthusiasts. Probably other places I'm not thinking about, too. Like car dealerships and whole car manufacturers.)
Whoa...never having to spend the day at the DMV! Now, that's a biggie!
But, yea. Governments could also step in and pressure the public into converting over.
As for concealing where you've been from the government is already growing more outdated, every year. Here in California, there was a massive push to connect video cameras to every traffic signal that could host them. It was funny to see them connected to signals THAT ALSO USED the snapshot cameras that caught red light runners.
Now, Vegas has been using these really advanced computers for quite some time to recognize people by facial profiling. A part of the system is there to catch cheaters. But, this facial recognition is also able to identify people. If Vegas can afford this tech, why not the government? Imagine a main frame, dedicated to facial matches as cars pass by all these thousands of cameras. Always creating files on who passed what point at a certain time. A virtual diary of millions of lives in motion. To stop being tracked, you've got to get away from traffic signals. And spy satellites. So, guess what. Uncle Sam probably already knows when you go to strip clubs and how often. Let's just hope that Uncle Sam isn't the black mailing type. Homeland Security's already been taken too far. And, how do we know if modern cars aren't secretly transmitting GPS co-ordinance? When hackers are breaking in remotely via a software flaw, your new car never truly was yours to control, anyhow.