This Week in the Future of Cars: Who's In Charge Here, Anyway?

This Week in the Future of Cars: Who's In Charge Here, Anyway?

Audi's A8 will be the first car to feature its Traffic Jam Pilot self-driving feature—but not in the US.
AUDI

This Week in the Future of Cars: Who's In Charge Here, Anyway?

Audi's A8 will be the first car to feature its Traffic Jam Pilot self-driving feature—but not in the US.
AUDI

Rules were made to be broken. Unless you’re up against, say, special prosecutor Robert Mueller or the frightful might of the Federal Aviation Administration. Turns out that in transportation, like so many other things, regulators can serve as a thick, strong wall, crushing even the most delightful (or horrifying) of innovations with the weight of concrete.

Observe Uber’s self-driving car program, which, as senior writer Jack Stewart explains, will definitely have to contend with the FAA before it gets off the ground. Or the shaky future of new and potentially life-saving semiautonomous vehicle tech in the US, which carmakers are loath to unleash in a country without firm rules about licensing and liability. Or Tesla, a veteran of ugly tiffs with American road safety officials over the safety of its Autopilot feature.

Watch the rule-breakers, but also the rule-makers, is all we’re saying. This week was full of both. Let’s get you caught up.

Headlines

Stories you might have missed from WIRED this week

  • What’s keeping Audi’s semiautonomous tech out of the US? Transportation editor Alex Davies chats with experts and discovers that, weirdly enough, it’s a lack of laws. The state-by-state pathwork for automated technology freaks some carmakers out.

  • California’s booming cannabis business creates a strange conundrum for the transportation-minded: How to legally transport weed inside the state in a vehicle that must be registered with the federally controlled Department of Transportation, which still sees weed as illegal? Contributor Nick Stockton breaks it down.

  • Last week, a bunch of hopeful and rose-colored-glasses-toting Uber executives hosted a summit all about their plans for electric self-driving cars, or vertical takeoff and landing vehicles. Unfortunately for the ride hailing turned all transportation company, one of their plans’ biggest skeptics also controls this country’s airspace: the Federal Aviation Administration.

  • Tesla CEO Elon Musk has touted some not-so-ironclad statistics to prove the safety of his company’s semiautonomous Autopilot feature. How could researchers prove its ability to save lives, once and for all? They’ll need a lot more transparency, and a lot more data.

  • Nissan follows Tesla into the solar panel business (but only in the UK). As Jack explains, this line of work makes sense for automakers, whose electric car offerings put them in the middle of a booming battery biz.

  • Humans are great at a lot of things, but preventing traffic jams is not one of them. Jack explores new research that suggests connected, autonomous cars could fight congestion by cutting down on the hard braking that tends to clog up the roads.

  • The difference between an infotainment system that distracts drivers and one that lets people drive and tune the radio without killing someone might be a drag-screen—not a touchcreen. Alex takes a deep dive into Acura’s newest innovation.

  • Forget self-driving and flying cars, or hyperloops, or monorails, argues columnist Clive Thompson: The biggest, best innovation in transportation today is the bicycle.

Rudy Giuliani-Inspired PSA of the Week

Former New York mayor turned presidential lawyer Rudy Giuliani doored a pedicab driver while exiting a car in midtown Manhattan on Thursday. Do not be like Rudy! Protect your friendly neighborhood cyclists by practicing the “dutch reach”: Use the hand furthest from the car door to open it, ensuring your head turns and looks up the street before heading outside.

Required Reading

News from elsewhere on the internet

In the Rearview

Essential stories from WIRED’s canon

You don’t have to be a blue button down-wearing government drone to make rules. Observe the social media world the teens have drawn up for themselves in this 2016 piece on the etiquette of being a youth online.