Public worries about self-driving cars are spiking after a pedestrian was killed by a robo-car
In recent weeks, self-driving cars have raised a lot of concerns. In March, an Uber self-driving car killed a pedestrian in what has been reported as the first ever self-driving car fatality in history. And a Tesla vehicle operating in semi-autonomous Autopilot mode was also involved in a fatal crash that month.
This chart by Statista compares the data taken from the National Safety Council from two polls: one in January, and one during the end of March/beginning of April 2018. In January, 36% of respondents reported that they found self-driving cars to be less safe than a vehicle controlled by a human. But by the beginning of April, that same index of concern had spiked by 14%. This increase in concern comes as some companies, like Google-spinout Waymo, are planning to roll out self driving car services to the public.
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