Doesn't look like, from the admittedly short video, that there's too much confusion from the people around it, other than the lady near the stop sign at the end, and that seems only because she's trying to decide if the car is going to stop for her.
The biggest problem and confusion just is that there isn't a driver. Noone challenges a human for going on a joyride.<p>The fact that there is no driver visible might be a bigger challenge for self driving vehicles and its acceptance.
<i>> Vancouver lawyer Paul Doroshenko said there are no laws against what he saw in the video</i><p>I am absolutely positive that it is illegal to drive on the wrong side of the road in Canada.<p>Was this really the only legal expert they could find?
I have a Tesla, and summon has always scared me. I've never used it. I never plan to use this "smart summon" either.<p>The only thing that has made me think about enabling summon is that in order to be able to remotely open your garage door via the Tesla app, using the transceiver in the car, you must have Summon enabled. Being able to open the garage door from thousands of miles away would be quite handy in case a family member was locked out. But I still haven't done it.
Direct link of the confusion <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dnioHfg1xbQ" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dnioHfg1xbQ</a>
“Driverless” is going to see a fast and final end when a small child gets killed by one of these robots and the owner, manufacturer, and every insurance company within throwing distance gets a billion dollar lawsuit judgement.<p>There is much hubris going around about AI and machine vision with business people and grad students taking lives into their hands and not seriously handling the responsibility.