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> I would be devastated if I learned my code ended even one person's life.

I agree, but there is already a lot of software in a car that can kill people in case of an error. In particular the airbag have multiple sensors and a complex heuristic to decide when the have to open, which ones, full or partial strength, ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airbag#Operation An airbag that doesn't open can kill someone. An airbag that open unnecessary can kill someone. From Wikipedia:

> From 1990 to 2000, the United States National Highway Traffic Safety Administration identified 175 fatalities caused by air bags. Most of these (104) have been children, while the rest were adults. About 3.3 million air bag deployments have occurred during that interval, and the agency estimates more than 6,377 lives saved and countless injuries prevented.

So, there is already a lot of programmers that have to be careful because an error can kill someone in the car (or the plane, or a medical machine, ...) I guess it's more easy to ignore the people killed by airbags because we are use to them and we imagine that they have a simple sensor (something like a light switch. So in case of a failure nobody is guilty.

With a self driving car, the first problem is that it is new and scary, and the second problem is that in an error that creates an accident we are use to blame the driver. But now we don't have anyone to blame (perhaps the programmer).



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