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Self-driving cars should be capable of cutting the annual number of traffic deaths in half by the time they’re ready for widespread use on American roads, a top federal official says.

In what may be a preview of the revised guidance on autonomous-vehicle development that government officials are scheduled to unveil next month, Mark Rosekind, administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, said he wants concrete safety for the technology. “I’d actually like to throw the gauntlet down,” he said, speaking on a panel during the TU-Automotive conference in Detroit. “Start with two times better. We need to set a higher bar if we expect safety to actually be a benefit here as opposed to just an equivalency. While no one wants to say, ‘How good is good enough?,’ I’d actually say, ‘Start at two times and then let’s work from there.’ ”



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Fed Banks On Self Driving Technology To Half Traffic Deaths - What Will Be The Real Figure?

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