• sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    I feel like some reddit brain would say “oh we’ll just enforce this digitally once everyone drives a self driving car”

    given how many times computers fuck up and just randomly turn off or some shit, I still think humans (some of them at least) are more dependable

    • 7bicycles [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      9 months ago

      15% is not a hard success rate to beat but. This isn’t dickriding self driving cars, that shit is never going to work without fucking everyone outside of a car over more, but that’s kind of the point, the answer to this problem is not cars (any version)

    • MatthewToad43@climatejustice.social
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      9 months ago

      @sooper_dooper_roofer @mondoman712 Modern petrol cars contain lots of computers too.

      Automatic enforcement, with the right to override it recorded in the black box to be used as evidence in crash cases, is a perfectly reasonable idea. But inevitably there will be bugs, just as there are in self-driving cars (especially the often dangerous “semi-autonomous” vehicles).

      However there is a cheaper solution: Fixed, widespread speed cameras. Which right now are effectively banned in the UK, because the treasury confiscates the fines (local government pays the running costs, and therefore can’t afford to run any).

      While I understand there are usability issues, and design can help with that, if you’re not able to drive your ton of metal safely and legally you shouldn’t be driving it. If people expected to get caught, they’d drive slower.

      The bottom line is speed limits are the law. And lower speed limits reduce the number of serious injuries dramatically and help to push people onto public transport. Although with old cars they increase emissions slightly; with modern hybrids they reduce them.

      • gabriel@col.social
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        9 months ago

        @matthewtoad43 @sooper_dooper_roofer @mondoman712 Oh, but you don’t have to enforce the fine every single time. Speed should be monitored for every car, all the time, and then apply statistical analysis to punish.

        Therefore if you were wrongfully accused, you’ll be ok, as you follow the law most of the time. But those who play fast n furious at every opportunity would be certainly caught as the murderous type that they are.

            • MatthewToad43@climatejustice.social
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              9 months ago

              @gabriel @sooper_dooper_roofer @mondoman712 Because somehow drivers have decided that driving is a right in the same sense that freedom of association is a right.

              That any restriction on their ability to drive, that any monitoring of their driving in a public place, is somehow against civil liberties.

              That the law should be reinterpreted to suit them. That “causing death by dangerous driving” is somehow less serious than manslaughter (aka murder 3).

              Freedom to drive has never been a constitutional or human right. Certainly not in my country nor in the USA.

              Cars need to be regulated for the same reason that guns need to be regulated.

      • PowerCrazy
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        9 months ago

        A cheaper alternative would be no cars at all you know?

        • MatthewToad43@climatejustice.social
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          9 months ago

          @immibis @sooper_dooper_roofer @mondoman712 In the UK, local councils pay for fixed speed cameras.

          Central government confiscates the fines.

          When this was introduced the vast majority of fixed speed cameras disappeared more or less overnight: Councils could not afford to run them without a revenue stream. Their budgets had been cut ~50% by that same government.

          The government justifies this by saying “the war on the motorist is over”.

          But it’s a funny kind of war. The fatalities are overwhelmingly caused by motorists.

            • MatthewToad43@climatejustice.social
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              9 months ago

              @immibis @sooper_dooper_roofer @mondoman712 Why not? Elected local governments should be able to fund the maintenance of fixed speed cameras out of the fines received.

              They can’t, which means, given enormous cuts in their budget largely the result of central government decisions, they could no longer afford to maintain speed cameras.

              As a result, more motorists drive at unsafe speeds, and people die.

              More speed cameras is a *GOOD* thing.

              I see absolutely nothing wrong with enforcement paying for itself in this case.

              • PowerCrazy
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                9 months ago

                My biggest issue with speed camera’s is the middleman corruption that follows them, and perverse incentives they create. Do cities make money on traffic lights? Are they removing them because they can’t make money on them? Why is it different for Speed Cameras?

                • MatthewToad43@climatejustice.social
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                  9 months ago

                  @PowerCrazy They are removing them because they *LOSE* money on them.

                  They are, in the UK at least, not allowed to keep any of the money generated.

                  But they have to pay for the costs of running them.

                  And they can’t afford to because their budgets have been cut so far over the last 13 years of tory misrule that in many cases they can no longer provide basic services that they are legally obliged to provide.

                  Back when they could cover their costs, there were lots of speed cameras. Now there are very few. Because evil politicians, usually tories, have always sacrificed lives for political convenience.

                  • PowerCrazy
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                    9 months ago

                    Surely Building/Maintaining roads and traffic signals isn’t free? The council has to pay the costs of running those? Why not remove/shut-down roads so they can avoid paying maintenance for them?