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Google
takes 'some responsibility' for crash - 1st March
2016


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A
self-driving car being tested by Google struck a public
bus on a Silicon Valley street in a minor accident
that appears to be the first time one of the tech
company's vehicles has caused a crash during testing.
Google
accepted at least some responsibility for the collision,
which occurred on February 14 when one of the Lexus
SUVs it has outfitted with sensors and cameras hit
the side of the bus near the company's headquarters
in Mountain View, California.
No
one was injured, according to an accident report Google
wrote and submitted to the California Department of
Motor Vehicles. It was posted online on Monday.
According
to the report, Google's car intended to turn right
off a major boulevard when it detected sandbags around
a storm drain at the intersection.
The
right lane was wide enough to let some cars turn and
others go straight, but the Lexus needed to slide
to its left within the right lane to get around the
obstruction.
The
Lexus was going 3km/h when it made the move and its
left front struck the right side of the bus, which
was going straight at 24km/h.
The
car's test driver thought the bus would yield and
did not have control before the collision, Google
said.
While
the report does not address fault, Google said in
a statement: 'We clearly bear some responsibility
because if our car hadn't moved there wouldn't have
been a collision.'
The
head of Google's self-driving car project, Chris Urmson,
said in a brief interview he believed the Lexus was
moving before the bus started to pass.
'We
saw the bus, we tracked the bus, we thought the bus
was going to slow down, we started to pull out, there
was some momentum involved,' Urmson told The Associated
Press.
He
acknowledged Google's car did have some responsibility
but said it was 'not black and white'.
The
Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority said none
of the 15 passengers or the driver of the bus was
injured.
It
is reviewing the incident and has not reached any
conclusions about liability, spokeswoman Stacey Hendler
Ross said in a written statement.
There
may never be a legal decision on fault, especially
if damage was negligible and neither Google nor the
transit authority pushes the case.
Still,
the collision could be the first time a Google car
in autonomous mode caused a crash.
Google
cars have been involved in nearly a dozen collisions
in or around Mountain View since starting to test
on city streets in the spring of 2014.
In
most cases, Google's cars were rear-ended. No one
has been seriously injured.
Google's
written statement called the collision 'a classic
example of the negotiation that's a normal part of
driving - we're all trying to predict each other's
movements'.
It
said its computers reviewed the incident and engineers
changed the software that governed the cars to understand
that buses may not be as inclined to yield as other
vehicles.
(AP)
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