This article was published on May 23, 2018

Uber shutters self-driving car testing program in Arizona


Uber shutters self-driving car testing program in Arizona

Uber today announced it was shutting down its self-driving car test program in Arizona, this a mere two months after the company began investigating a fatal incident involving an autonomous vehicle and a pedestrian.

What it means: For the 200 or so Uber employees working on the Tempe-based project it means a pink slip. According to a report from AZCentral, the local site that broke the news, the company sent notification early Wednesday morning letting workers know theyā€™d be out of work within a few weeks.

A little deeper: Uber isnā€™t killing its self-driving program. Itā€™s set to continue testing in Pittsburgh and California. And, according to AZCentral, an Uber spokesperson said:

Weā€™re committed to self-driving technology, and we look forward to returning to public roads in the near future. In the meantime, we remain focused on our top-to-bottom safety review, having brought on former NTSB Chair Christopher Hart to advise us on our overall safety culture.

That probably doesnā€™t encourage those soon to be unemployed in Arizona ā€“ which is kind of ironic because it isnā€™t self-driving technology thatā€™s taking their jobs, but human bias. According to recent research from CarGurus, nearly 80 percent of car owners donā€™t trust automated vehicles.

Despite the fact that early indications seem to show the accident may not have been the AIā€™s fault, and the company voluntarily stopped testing, Arizonaā€™s Governor insists on upholding a suspension until such time as the Federal investigation has completed.

How much this influenced Uberā€™s decision to shutter testing operations in Arizona remains unknown, but weā€™ve reached out to Uber and the Governorā€™s office for more information.

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