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WebMCP is available for early preview

https://developer.chrome.com/blog/webmcp-epp
60•andsoitis•1h ago•39 comments

How to talk to anyone, and why you should

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2026/feb/24/stranger-secret-how-to-talk-to-anyone-why-yo...
340•Looky1173•5d ago•165 comments

Are the Mysteries of Quantum Mechanics Beginning to Dissolve?

https://www.quantamagazine.org/are-the-mysteries-of-quantum-mechanics-beginning-to-dissolve-20260...
45•wjb3•2h ago•36 comments

Tove Jansson's criticized illustrations of The Hobbit

https://tovejansson.com/hobbit-tolkien/
39•abelanger•2d ago•11 comments

Ghostty – Terminal Emulator

https://ghostty.org/docs
582•oli5679•11h ago•252 comments

Big Breakfast Alters Appetite, Gut Health

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/british-journal-of-nutrition/article/big-breakfast-diet-c...
43•wjb3•2h ago•28 comments

Little Free Library Books

https://littlefreelibrary.org/
20•TigerUniversity•1h ago•4 comments

When does MCP make sense vs CLI?

https://ejholmes.github.io/2026/02/28/mcp-is-dead-long-live-the-cli.html
222•ejholmes•7h ago•151 comments

Decision trees – the unreasonable power of nested decision rules

https://mlu-explain.github.io/decision-tree/
384•mschnell•15h ago•66 comments

Long Range E-Bike (2021)

https://jacquesmattheij.com/long-range-ebike/
103•birdculture•3d ago•134 comments

Microgpt explained interactively

https://growingswe.com/blog/microgpt
162•growingswe•14h ago•21 comments

How Next-Gen Spacecraft Are Overwhelming Our Communication Networks

https://atempleton.bearblog.dev/how-next-gen-spacecraft-are-overwhelming-our-communication-networks/
5•korrz•2d ago•0 comments

Chorba: A novel CRC32 implementation (2024)

https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.16398
30•fnands•2d ago•10 comments

Setting up phones is a nightmare

https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/setting-up-phones-is-a-nightmare/
91•bariumbitmap•3d ago•107 comments

Flightradar24 for Ships

https://atlas.flexport.com/
173•chromy•13h ago•40 comments

Why XML tags are so fundamental to Claude

https://glthr.com/XML-fundamental-to-Claude
148•glth•9h ago•103 comments

Operational issue – Multiple services (UAE)

https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status
152•earthboundkid•4h ago•66 comments

Python Type Checker Comparison: Empty Container Inference

https://pyrefly.org/blog/container-inference-comparison/
52•ocamoss•4d ago•32 comments

Microgpt

http://karpathy.github.io/2026/02/12/microgpt/
1663•tambourine_man•22h ago•290 comments

Gzpeek: Tool to Parse Gzip Metadata

https://evanhahn.com/introducing-gzpeek/
29•ingve•2d ago•1 comments

Interview with Øyvind Kolås, GIMP developer (2017)

https://www.gimp.org/news/2026/02/22/%C3%B8yvind-kol%C3%A5s-interview-ww2017/
118•ibobev•3d ago•49 comments

Programming in K

https://github.com/JohnEarnest/ok/blob/gh-pages/docs/Programming.md
29•tosh•3d ago•4 comments

Why does C have the best file API

https://maurycyz.com/misc/c_files/
67•maurycyz•4h ago•41 comments

How the Government Deceived Congress in the Debate over Surveillance Powers (2013)

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/06/director-national-intelligences-word-games-explained-how-go...
59•doener•3h ago•4 comments

10-202: Introduction to Modern AI (CMU)

https://modernaicourse.org
220•vismit2000•16h ago•46 comments

Waymo blocking ambulance during deadly Austin shooting

https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/austin/article/waymo-austin-shooting-21948947.php
82•clydethefrog•2h ago•116 comments

I built a demo of what AI chat will look like when it's "free" and ad-supported

https://99helpers.com/tools/ad-supported-chat
447•nickk81•12h ago•259 comments

South Korean Police Lose Seized Crypto by Posting Password Online

https://gizmodo.com/south-korean-police-lose-seized-crypto-by-posting-password-online-2000728191
34•WarOnPrivacy•2h ago•10 comments

Allegations of insider trading over prediction-market bets tied to Iran conflict

https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20260301140/allegations-of-insider-trading-over-pred...
15•paulpauper•1h ago•2 comments

Show HN: Audio Toolkit for Agents

https://github.com/shiehn/sas-audio-processor
45•stevehiehn•8h ago•5 comments
Open in hackernews

Waymo blocking ambulance during deadly Austin shooting

https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/austin/article/waymo-austin-shooting-21948947.php
82•clydethefrog•2h ago

Comments

xvxvx•2h ago
We continue to inch closer to these dumb buckets costing someone their life. Hell, they may already have.
afavour•1h ago
Human driven cars cost people their lives multiple times every day, though. So I don't think the calculation can be quite as simple as that. As self driving cars are rolled out I think each incident like this needs to be studied to see how avoidable it was, whether a human would have been able to resolve it, and what changes can be made.

There are always going to be fuck ups at some level. The question is whether we’re moving from a world of more fuckups to fewer or not.

jeffbee•1h ago
"Multiple" being stretched to the absolute limit in this comment.
amelius•1h ago
The argument that as long as they cause less incidents than human drivers they are a win has to go. Because that only works if the statistics of the environment are stationary.
afavour•1h ago
What does “statistics of the environment” mean in this context? How can fewer deaths on the road not be a win?
majormajor•1h ago
I think they're getting at something like this: If self-driving cars resulted in dramatically more miles-traveled-in-car per person they could be safer per-mile and more efficient per-mile while making some important total outcomes worse.

Relevant to this example: if people travel by car more because they care less about traffic when they're playing video games or on TikTok during it, instead of driving, overall congestion will likely go up which makes emergency services worse.

afavour•1h ago
That’s fair but I think it’s kind of orthogonal to the original point.

As is already the case in cities with robust public transit systems you’d need to make sure you’re applying the right incentives (i.e. taxes and charges) to make sure people are making decisions that benefit everyone. That doesn’t alter the possibility of self driving cars being much safer than human driven ones.

Noaidi•1h ago
But in the case of self driving cars, who do we find at fault? Have we even answered that question? I mean did the Waymo car even get a ticket for blocking the ambulance?
jeffbee•30m ago
Has any human driver ever received such a summons?
cj•1h ago
If you are to believe Waymo’s safety stats, they have less accidents/injuries per mile driven.

But whether or not reducing injuries at a statistical level outweighs the downside of autonomous vehicles causing accidents (even at lower rates) is a bit of a dilemma.

SecretDreams•1h ago
I think the style of incidents and circumstances are probably neglected. But, even if they're not, I think there's other reasons we notice waymo issues more. Akin to how nuclear and airplane travel are safer than coal and car travel. This might be true, but when something does go well in those aforementioned fields, we notice.
furyofantares•1h ago
The human side of those stats, whenever I've seen them presented next to self-driving car stats, has always been an aggregate of all human driving, a vast amount of which is in environments or conditions that Waymo doesn't operate in.
dyauspitr•1h ago
No, we’re finding edge cases that come up once every like million miles these things are putting on the road. Which means they are pretty damn good given how many are on the road right now.
screye•1h ago
It's the reverse. Every Waymo on the road saves more lives. The average driver is a bufoon
stbtrax•58m ago
The 'smart' buckets kill about 40K a year, so there's that. No point in abandoning this
xvxvx•16m ago
Now there will be a single company to sue instead of lots of individuals. If you want to be rich, start a law firm that focuses on autonomous vehicle accidents, like all the truck crash firms out there.
4d4m•1h ago
Wild! Who wrote legislation to allow this?
bgun•1h ago
You mean cars being allowed to endanger human lives? Enshrined by law, urban infrastructure and cultural notions of independence for over a century? Why is it just now seen as a problem because robots are driving, instead of the stupid, reckless, poorly trained, often intoxicated humans who have been driving up until now?
4d4m•1h ago
Lol no, way to discuss something not mentioned - do you work at one of these reckless companies? I'm talking about self-driving legislation, written by those wanting to test on an unsuspecting public.
tt24•17m ago
Whoever wrote the legislation has my vote for reelection. Anything to make roads safer.
prhn•1h ago
At the risk of sounding ignorant, why didn't the various police cruisers and even the ambulance itself just push the damn thing out of the way? That's what the push bars attached to the front of their vehicles are for.
johnnyApplePRNG•1h ago
My thoughts exactly.

What an embarrassment.

"Authorities" paralyzed by politeness when lives are in the balance.

AdrianB1•1h ago
Ambulances can be seriously damaged by attempting to do it. Police cruisers can do it, but then they may be sued for damages. I know that cars blocking fire hydrants were a serious problem in the past and owners sued firemen for pulling water hoses through their cars after breaking the windows - the law was not allowing it even if the line through the car was the only option.
zephen•1h ago
> owners sued firemen for pulling water hoses through their cars after breaking the windows - the law was not allowing it even if the line through the car was the only option.

I'll bet anything you have no citation for this.

Sovereign immunity and necessity combine to make sure that firefighters and cops can do whatever the fuck is required.

The aftermath is even more brutal. You will receive multiple tickets for this, you will receive a bill for damages to the hose they had to thread through your windows (or to the police car that rammed you out of the way), and your car insurance will point to a clause in their policy that says that you are personally on the hook for all of this.

You may even face civil or even criminal liability for any damages to whatever is on fire, or loss of life, that a good prosecutor or plaintiff's lawyer can convince a jury is directly traceable to your egregious conduct in parking your precious car in front of the damn fire hydrant.

ibejoeb•49m ago
Sounds like trolling, but the idea of Waymo suing a responder to a terrorist attack is too ridiculous.
xoxxala•1h ago
When my mom was a firefighter, and a car was blocking a hydrant, she happily broke windows and pushed the hose right through the car. Didn't happen a lot, but did happen more than once.
dangus•1h ago
Ambulances aren’t exactly designed to act as battering rams.

They ram a car and the radiator goes bust and now you’ve got an ambulance with no engine.

Or you just hurt the passengers inside the Waymo and now you’ve got two emergencies.

vineyardmike•1h ago
A human police over eventually got into the drivers seat to move the car. They sat around for minutes before doing so. They could’ve gotten into it immediately.

But yea they absolutely could’ve also just slammed it and moved on too.

snickerbockers•1h ago
Because its not a trailer for Grand Theft Auto 6.
mxfh•1h ago
Cars block the street all the time, there is ample place to pass the waymo car on the left in the opposing lane, yet those SUV driving humans don't care to move out of the way either, and police just blocks the maneuver area too.

That silver car in the front could also just pass in front and make space. Situational awareness has room to be improved for a lot of entities in this short video.

Nueces Street is 3 and half lanes wide there plus massive sidewalks, apparently to narrow for even more massive ambulances.

https://maps.app.goo.gl/74jF9iDUCXmm9jVE7

tapoxi•1h ago
You can arrest a driver for not making space for an emergency vehicle. Who do we arrest here?
KennyBlanken•1h ago
The person who was ultimately responsible for a defective robot operating on our public streets, at a bare minimum.
general1465•1h ago
A customer?
aduty•1h ago
Start disabling and towing their cars and watch a solution magically appear.
wnevets•1h ago
> You can arrest a driver for not making space for an emergency vehicle. Who do we arrest here?

That's the best part, no one! We have finally managed to invent a system that widely disperses accountability so much no one can be held liable when something goes wrong.

gruez•58m ago
>no one can be held liable when something goes wrong.

No, at the very least tort laws still apply even if the driver is a corporation. Do you really need someone sitting in jail to satisfy your justice boner?

AngryData•52m ago
If someone sitting in jail doesn't help solve the problem, then maybe we should remove the jail penalty to for individuals that do it.
gruez•46m ago
>then maybe we should remove the jail penalty to for individuals that do it.

We don't send everyone to jail either. You can run over people and get away scot free, if it's an honest mistake and you weren't being negligent.

plagiarist•1m ago
Or if you were being negligent but due to affluenza.
smeggysmeg•49m ago
Yes, I want to see real, serious punishment for corporate crimes, on par with the life disruption experienced by people who see a jail sentence. It's almost always brutal - major income disruption, job loss, etc. If it's a small fine, which it always seems to be for corporations, then there is no incentive for following the law. I'm also in favor of corporate death sentences for large-scale egregious violations - liquidate assets and jail executives.

By corporatizing social harms, basically nobody is ever held accountable - except for the little guy.

gruez•36m ago
>By corporatizing social harms, basically nobody is ever held accountable - except for the little guy.

Again, this is false. At the very least there's financial penalties, which the shareholders are on the hook for. Moreover the corporate malfeasance that does happen don't map nicely to human crimes. If you kill a guy, you get sent to jail for decades. But what if you're a company, that makes a machine with sloppy code[1] that unintentionally kills someone? What do you do? Jail the programmer who wrote the code? Jail the manager who did the code review? Jail the CEO who had no knowledge of it but "buck stops with him" and we hate CEOs? How does the death penalty work? If you think it through it's basically a fine equivalent to the company's market cap. If Boeing does a bad that kills one person, does that mean the US government just repossesses the entire company?

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therac-25

mitthrowaway2•9m ago
Depending on how severe the error is, it could be professional negligence. In other professions, including engineering, this can result in a loss of the professional's license and their inability to continue to work in that field. Also, for negligent drivers, a suspension of their driving license can apply. So there is precedent for severe punishment even if nobody gets a jail sentence.
heisenzombie•5m ago
In Australia it's the board of directors who are liable. They can be liable if they personally direct the company to do something illegal (obviously?) but there is also a positive obligation to exercise due diligence. This covers (but is not limited to) workplace safety and safety of customers and the public. Directors can be personally liable for breaches of this duty and the penalties extend to possible imprisonment and very substantial fines.

For example: https://www.owhsp.qld.gov.au/court-report/fines-imposed-fail...

wnevets•40m ago
> No, at the very least tort laws still apply even if the driver is a corporation.

Do they?

altairprime•20m ago
Corporations are person-like entities, so there’s a plausible argument to be made. The states seem loathe to be precedent-setters in triggering evaluations of this argument, though, so I don’t know of any supporting cases yet. Whoever’s first will see corporate tax revenue fall off a cliff once a corporation can be subjected to community service, so they have a lot of self-interest in not prosecuting these violations.
usefulcat•8m ago
Are you really asking whether corporations can be sued?
plagiarist•26m ago
I would like crimes to have consequences that actually deter the culprits from committing them. A pittance fine for a company is not what I want to see. Let's have a small percentage of net worth fine on the owners instead.
phyzix5761•8m ago
For publicly traded companies the owners/shareholders are your grandparents, teachers, all sorts of regular people. You want to take a percentage of their already small net worth?
grayhatter•6m ago
> Do you really need someone sitting in jail to satisfy your justice boner?

Literally, and intentionally avoiding any attempt to examine the implications? No probably not.

But reasonable punishment discourages bad behavior. And software engineers have a habit of ignoring the implications of a defective design. I think apocalyptic fines applied to the companies creating the systems for automated cars would also create the correct incentives, but I find that to be less likely than imprisonment.

What I want is software and systems to not suck ass. I don't want to deal with defective... everything, because it was faster to deliver. That's especially true when it contributes to the death or injury of a person that didn't do anything wrong.

I don't care what works, but people being afraid of going to jail for hurting someone absolutely does work. And 'administrative fines' don't work.

musicjerm•1h ago
The passenger
glennpratt•1h ago
Nobody gets arrested, you get a ticket.
cameldrv•5m ago
Since corporations are people, presumably you’d arrest Waymo.
briandw•1h ago
I don't often see a human driven car parked sideways in the middle of a road (never really). If a human was in that Waymo, they would have moved quickly. I'm an huge fan of Waymo and autonomous vehicles. They save lives. However the fact that Waymo's don't have the sense to move out of the way is a major problem and on that they don't seem to be on track to solve. Incidents like this will delay the adoption of autonomous vehicles and that will cost lives.
pigbearpig•1h ago
Give me a break. The problem is the Waymo that is blocking a lane sideways and is not pulling forward out of the way of the ambulance, a move that even the worst human drivers would likely know to do.

It does no good to pretend there aren't problems with self-driving cars or make excuses.

It's not about the other entities.

tt24•21m ago
Why are we focusing on entity A when the parent comment correctly pointed out entities B and C are not blameless either?
tokyobreakfast•22m ago
> there is ample place to pass

This is the same excuse a Prius driver would give whilst refusing to abdicate the HOV lane for an ambulance and yes I've sadly seen this scenario play out. Multiple times, in fact. Prius driver seems oddly specific but it always is.

fennecbutt•14m ago
Eh I've seen more SUV/big car drivers act like this than small car drivers, but then I live in the UK.

A friend who lived in New York for a bit would never live there again and says driving there was an absolute nightmare; everyone's out for themselves.

And you can see it in multiple "drivers react to an ambulance in different countries videos", with America the ambulance is always blocked and going slowly. Compare to Germany where they open up the entire middle of the road by moving to either side.

N_Lens•1h ago
Nowaymo!
dangero•1h ago
The problem we will encounter with self driving cars is that while they will make less mistakes than humans, they will make different mistakes.

Humans will continue to have a hard time accepting this tradeoff.

I live in LA where Waymos are now on every street. My experience is that they don’t respect human courtesy, so for example if I need to cross a lane of busy traffic, a human may brake as a courtesy to let me through. Waymos have fucked me over where a human probably would have shown some level of community and empathy.

NewJazz•1h ago
Humans will continue to have a hard time accepting this tradeoff.

Are you asserting that humans should accept these, currently not fully known, tradeoffs?

dangero•39m ago
If it results in less deaths then it seems likely to me
tt24•19m ago
Yes. They're safer than human drivers. Clearly the tradeoff is worth it.
fragmede•1h ago
Waymo's are not about to run a person or bicyclist over. Just walk in front of them and they'll stop for you to cross. You can always start livestreaming if you don't believe it, the insurance payout would be amazing. (Subject to the laws of physics, naturally.)

Source: Haven't been run over yet by one, and I live in one of their current markets.

macintux•1h ago
Good luck making eye contact with the Waymo to gain confidence that it sees you.
rogerrogerr•55m ago
Do you want them to put googley eyes on it? If you can see it, it can see you. Pretty simple.

Eye contact matters for humans because they might be looking at their phones, or their McDonald's fries, or staring straight into the sun. None of these things happen with self-driving cars. It's a non-issue.

NewJazz•16m ago
That would actually be great. Some kind of eye brow raise, a gesture, any recognition/indication that it perceives a life to preserve.
SlinkyOnStairs•46m ago
> Waymo's are not about to run a person or bicyclist over.

This has only introduced more novel problems. People can completely immobilize the vehicles by standing in front of them, or placing a traffic cone. (And while this is kind of funny when done to unused vehicles to bother a multi-trillion dollar corporation. It is not funny when it's done to harass women.)

This in turn spirals into a whole new set of political problems, because drivers are collectively quite intolerant of the pedestrians and especially cyclists they share the road with. There is a lot of pedestrian and cyclist behaviour that is curtailed by motorist bullying, which autonomous cars don't really do. (Your walking in front of them being a fine example)

Things like cyclists "taking the lane" are deeply unpopular despite being entirely legal and good road safety practice. Increased rollout of AVs will only make this more prevalent and then you'll have a whole new demographic of angry people mad that their waymo is slow because it's behind a cyclist.

fennecbutt•12m ago
>People can completely immobilize the vehicles by standing in front of them

This is true of any vehicle lmao. Someone can stand in front of your vehicle and prevent you from proceeding and there's not a thing you can do about it.

ibejoeb•1h ago
That courtesy is almost always bad practice and is generally unlawful. You must yield right of way to a pedestrian at a legal crossing, but california has codes that prohibit impeding normal traffic flow, including stopping in the street to wave across a pedestrian where there is no such crossing. It's especially dangerous on multi-lane roads because the stopped vehicle can blind the pedestrian to other traffic.
rfrey•1h ago
In many places, traffic would not function if drivers did not e.g. make space for other drivers to change lanes. It's an extraordinary claim to say such behaviour is bad practice (or even illegal??)
ibejoeb•1h ago
In that context, yes, there are certainly cases where making space is reasonable and legal, like stopping shy of side intersection while (traffic is stopped) to allow a turn.

Stopping or altering traffic isn't, though. You shouldn't stop at a green to allow another driver to maneuver for all the same reasons.

noduerme•1h ago
I think the comment you're responding to was referring to needing to cross a backed up lane of traffic in their car, not on foot.
ibejoeb•58m ago
Sure, there are valid scenarios. LA certainly has some terrible and legal vehicle crossings. (The fast, windy portion of beverly ranks.) I agree that it's hard to navigate without some cooperation. It's just that almost all of the crashes I've witnessed involved someone giving a bad go-ahead.
rogerrogerr•1h ago
"Courtesy causes confusion; confusion causes crashes"
KennyBlanken•1h ago
> The problem we will encounter with self driving cars is that while they will make less mistakes than humans

This is only true for certain self-driving cars. Tesla and Uber are among the worst, and are far worse than human drivers. Something like 10x, I believe, in terms of miles driven?

orliesaurus•1h ago
This is my town, wow - cant believe someone filmed this whole interaction while there was a shooting a couple of blocks from there... If the ambulance was in a hurry they could have rammed the Waymo, I am sure Google wouldn't have sued for damages.

AFAIK when a Waymo detects emergency vehicle lights and sirens, it is designed to pull over and stop, unlock its doors, and roll down its windows. Also: First responders can put the vehicle into a manual mode to move it if needed.

snickerbockers•1h ago
>If the ambulance was in a hurry

i believe they were.

>they could have rammed the Waymo

Not an expert but i think the goal is to get the ambulance and its occupants to a specific location and then make an egress to a nearby medical facility? Also I'm not confident ambulances are designed to execute the pit maneuver.

>I am sure Google wouldn't have sued for damages.

Oh well if that's the case i guess it's all alright.

>First responders can put the vehicle into a manual mode to move it if needed.

I really feel like you're missing the point of why you're supposed to pull over and yield right-of-way for emergency vehicles.

rogerrogerr•1h ago
Can't pit a stationary vehicle.
comrh•1h ago
Isn't it making an illegal u-turn over a double yellow line?
hansvm•1h ago
Kind of. The thing making it illegal is that it's blocking traffic in the process (and potentially missing some visibility requirement or something; it's hard to tell from just the video).
KennyBlanken•1h ago
I've never understood why everyone acts like this is some bizarre legal quagmire.

If I make a robot and it goes and kills someone, nobody sits around navel gazing wondering how they're going to prosecute a robot.

If I make a device that pulls the trigger of a gun aimed at someone tied to a chair when I click a button on my cell phone, or something green appears in the camera attached to the device, or time reaches 11:24:42pm - nobody sits around navel gazing wondering how they're going to prosecute an electronic device.

In both cases, I would be prosecuted.

These cars are robots. They are designed, constructed, programmed, and monitored/supervised by humans. The humans are responsible for anything the robots do that cause damage, violate civil regulations, or criminal laws.

The solution here is very simple. Seize all the corporate email records, code, etc. and charge everyone involved in the production of the code that caused the "behavior", along with anyone whose negligence in supervision or review failed to catch the defect, or anyone who knew the car would or could do what it did, and failed to blow the whistle or failed to stop the car hitting the road.

Maybe then SV will stop "beta testing" fatal devices on the general public.

himata4113•1h ago
I can feel like a lot of people will disagree with you, but this is a pretty fair comparison. The people will disagree the most is the waymo users and I see their POV as well since as they have said: "much better than uber and always on time".
zephen•1h ago
A few years ago I would have believed this.

But then, I would have also believed that youtube would have been sued into oblivion before it even got established, and that uber and lyft would not have been able to sidestep all the municipal regulations, and that we would have photographic evidence of bigfoot by now.

sashank_1509•34m ago
This is ridiculous. We don’t send surgeons to jail if they mistakenly kill their patient.
orliesaurus•1h ago
Someone on Austin's subreddit said the following and I think it's the correct take/lens:

> I might get downvoted for expressing my feelings but whatever. I hate seeing my coworkers being ridiculed for simply doing the right thing and moving on with their work. I’ve been abused and called an idiot on here for stating our reality. I’m a paramedic. We will NOT attempt to move or hit a vehicle, person, or object to go to a call or transport a patient. Especially if there’s an option for an alternate route. People cut us off, don’t move, flick us off, and generally don’t regard us even with our lights and sirens on. Is it frustrating? Absolutely. Do we like it? Hell no. But getting in trouble or under investigation for a collision or possibly causing unnecessary harm simply isn’t worth it. I know this was high profile, tragic, and absolutely dire. But you have to remember, we live this everyday and this is not the first time a vehicle, object, or person has gotten in this paramedic or EMTs way and it won’t be the last. Don’t even get me started on the amount of verbal abuse and assaults we deal with. This is a very hard job and we are under constant scrutiny but I promise you we try and do our very best every day. So please do us a favor next time you see us out on the streets and give us some grace.

wongarsu•44m ago
He makes an excellent job describing all lots of systematic issues here

- a collision causes an investigation that is "not worth it"

- even in this case that was "high profile, tragic, and absolutely dire"

- vehicles, objects, or people get in paramedics' or EMTs' way on a daily basis, apparently without consequences

- EMTs are subject to high levels of verbal abuse and assaults, apparently without consequences

- yet they are the ones under constant scrutiny

Now don't get me wrong, I am not against oversight. But compare this with American cops, who seem authorized to do far more damage to vehicles and people for often far less immediate benefit, have much laxer oversight, and do not have to endure abuse without recourse (well, technically they do have to do that, but it's not advisable to test this)

alwaysdoit•25m ago
Mostly agree, but choosing not to risk a new collision in order to maybe get there slightly faster (what if you damage the ambulance and are unable to continue?) to maybe help someone does seem like the right call
dzhiurgis•1h ago
where's the lidar bois now?
himata4113•1h ago
Everyone is downvoted in the comments 80% are grey? Even the ones that sound perfectly reasonable? Upvoted one and it was still greyed out which makes me think there's more to it, but maybe I am missing something really obvious.
hoppyhoppy2•59m ago
>Please don't comment about the voting on comments. It never does any good, and it makes boring reading.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

himata4113•40m ago
I've been on the site for years and have never seen something like that even with heated topics, the guidelines are there as a guide, but this was completely out of the ordinary (at least for me).
escapegoat•1h ago
My kneejerk, not thought through notion: why not require an emergency override protocol be builtin to road using robots? No thoughts on how this would work exactly, but it would let emergency workers move robot vehicles out of the way.
aaomidi•1h ago
How do you propose to build something like that where it’s actually limited to just emergency workers?

This is like the fire keys for elevators. You can find them on eBay.

gruez•52m ago
It's not too hard to implement them with cryptographic protocols to prevent duplication and apply time/location restrictions to them. Moreover if you really wanted to steal a car, there are much easier ways of doing that, like buying a replica gun on aliexpress then going to your nearest intersection.
kelvinjps10•48m ago
The problem is not really that they can get stolen, but remote control, like a bad person gaining access to the car to hit people or something like that.
gruez•42m ago
>like a bad person gaining access to the car to hit people or something like that.

That can be eliminated by not giving direct control and something closer to what Waymo "Remote Assistance Agents" have access to: https://waymo.com/blog/2024/05/fleet-response/

dylan604•16m ago
First thought would be to have the remote human over watching to engage with an emergency responder when the override is used. The remote human can then decide whether it is a real emergency or not. Either way, if any one uses an override system, a remote human should get involved. But instead, computer devs will suggest crypto/public/private keys/blahblahblah. This is one of those where the best answer will be to boot up the bio computer running the latest software
geor9e•9m ago
It doesn't sound difficult to solve. The sensors can classify firetruck, ambulance, red&blues, uniformed police, badge, siren, etc. At a certain criteria, they can unlock the driver door for normal human driving, perhaps for a very limited speed and distance. The officer can move it to the side, and if they crash it's not waymo crashing it. This override should send the an alert to the remote command center, so a human can watch the video and also decide how much further they can drive it. Since passenger safety is a concern, if there is a passenger inside who chooses to remain inside, the car should remain locked and not allow any driver in. The human can decide to follow police orders to exit the car, or remain inside, but at that point a human becomes responsible for obstructing. The whole freezing waymo trend seems driven by legal liability - not engineering. They know if they always freeze, their million miles with no accidents stats are safe.
grayhatter•1m ago
And every single day you hear about someone abusing them right? Or no?
snickerbockers•55m ago
Theres already an emergency override protocol, you see the lights or hear the siren and then get out of the ambulance's way.
ekianjo•1h ago
I thought Lidar solved everything?
Janicc•1h ago
This comment section surely would look the same if it had been a Tesla, right?
ikiris•1h ago
Since teslas have drivers.... no?
rogerrogerr•1h ago
Heisenberg's Tesla - if it is doing something good, it has a driver. If it is doing something bad, it's autonomous.
passwordoops•53m ago
Depends who's observing
indecisive_user•1h ago
Austin has Tesla robotaxis with no driver.
small_model•28m ago
Yes it would, it would have been an electrek link with a damning EDS headline then a pile on. Cleary shows the bias HN posters have (most have some sort of EDS)
UltraSane•1h ago
The neat thing about self driving fleets is that when you fix a issue like this ALL the cars start driving better.
tim-tday•1h ago
First responders need the ability to say get the fuck out of here, don’t come back, tell your friends.
small_model•32m ago
Another example of Waymo betting wrong, lots of expensive sensors vs Tesla with cameras and NN trained on billions of real miles (i.e. human like autonomy). A Tesla would have moved as it's trained to recognise this situation.
dabinat•28m ago
Tesla’s FSD has a storied history of problems with emergency vehicles.
bastawhiz•24m ago
My model 3 routinely recognized blue tinted street lights as "emergency vehicles" and would slow down on the highway for them. And to the best of my knowledge, a Waymo has never plowed into a stopped truck or barrier, killing the occupants.
paganel•27m ago
The tech-bros never learn any humility, we have here an actual example of one of their hellish AI darlings blocking the first responders in their way to the aftermath of a terrorist attack, and what do those tech-bros' do? They continue supporting their hellish AI darling. Ellul was always right about things.
reenorap•21m ago
I was using Tesla Summon in my car parking lot. It had pulled out of the spot and started to turn to leave the spot when a truck entered the row. My Tesla couldn’t move because of the truck and I couldn’t do anything else so it was a deadlock. Normally if a person was caught in this situation they would have just parked back into the spot or reverse and straighten out but it had already started moving forward so I guess it just froze instead of reacting and there was no option to park back to get out of the way and unblock. Sure the truck could have pulled out but I think the guy was confused why the car was moving with someone in there and just stayed where he was.

Luckily the range of Summon isn’t very far so I ran over, apologized and took control of the car but it just goes to show how many real edge cases there are in real life and software can’t account for many of them.

gbin•11m ago
I'd LoVE to look into it but the news website is pure cancer ads before the video, no sound clock on sound that triggers another ad to you clock back, it restart an ad and you scroll a little bit and a top ad pops up while the bottom one is still there with like 3 words of the article readable.

I am sorry I am out.