12 comments

  • callc 1 hour ago
    I am, in general, hoping AV will reduce road deaths in the future.

    The last hurdle is regulatory. We can’t let AV manufacturers use “there’s no driver” as a way to escape responsibility, externalizing the harms AC cause onto society.

    The question is how to achieve fairness. If a human driver commits vehicular manslaughter, they get the book. What about AV? $10 million? Executives go to jail? What if $10 million fine per X AV miles driven is an OK cost of doing business?

    • loeg 1 hour ago
      > If a human driver commits vehicular manslaughter, they get the book.

      Hah. Do they, though? https://sfstandard.com/2026/03/20/mary-lau-sentenced-probati...

      The standard for human drivers is through the floor.

      • Hnrobert42 24 minutes ago
        > The standard for human drivers is through the floor.

        The linked article doesn't describe the standard. It describes a single, exceptional example.

        • loeg 18 minutes ago
          It's a representative example. (When you're disputing my evidenced claim, it behooves you to bring your own facts, rather than just asserting.)
          • mlyle 8 minutes ago
            I think it's not too surprising that the law treats people with diminished capacity differently. It's not a bug, it's a feature, even though it may feel upsetting. There's no winning solution in a case like that.
          • pessimizer 4 minutes ago
            > It's a representative example.

            This is the assertion. You can recognize it because the obvious reply is that it is not at all a representative example, but one that you just handpicked. You're question-begging.

      • Groxx 23 minutes ago
        Better than the current standard for AV, which is "what floor?"
      • Aachen 54 minutes ago
        Who does it benefit if an accident ruins a second life?

        What does a jail sentence deter? ("[no] gross negligence [...] wasn’t engaging in a race or sideshow, was not texting, and was not under influence")

        This person was 80 years old with no criminal record, needs to pay $67400 in restitution, do 200 hours of community service, isn't allowed to drive for 3 years but "never intends to drive again". Apologised to the family of the victims. She's taking responsibility and I can't imagine forced labor at that age is fun. What more can you ask for here? The family member isn't coming back if she gets what's not unlikely to be a life sentence

        Edit:

        > She told a witness at the scene that she was trying to park her car when she accidentally moved her foot to the gas pedal.

        This seems to happen a lot. Don't know about statistics but this happened to someone I know at 50yo (thankfully only damaged their own car minorly), and you hear it on the news with some regularity. Maybe the gas needs to be in a fundamentally different spot from the brake? We can jail the people to whom it happens, sure, but I can understand a judge using their head instead of their heart. The real solution must come either from the automotive industry or legislation

        • JumpCrisscross 26 minutes ago
          > Who does it benefit if an accident ruins a second life?

          The next person they'd mow down. (Also, retribution. It's a real human need and attempts at philosophising it away degrade trust in our justice system.)

          > isn't allowed to drive for 3 years

          This is the wild part. No! You don't drive again!

          > What more can you ask for here?

          For her to have recognised her own limitations before they took lives. Failing at that, her family–or literally anyone who cared about her, and didn't want to see her spend her last years in jail–having taken initiative.

          • mlyle 6 minutes ago
            > This is the wild part. No! You don't drive again!

            She's not going to drive again.

            > For her to have recognised her own limitations before they took lives.

            This is something that humans suck at.

            > Failing at that, her family–or literally anyone who cared about her, and didn't want to see her spend her last years in jail–having taken initiative.

            You shouldn't punish her for other people failing to take action.

        • qwe----3 51 minutes ago
          They intentionally moved assets to their family members to avoid liability, right?

          Laws are also meant to deter bad behavior, people who aren't able to drive safely should know there will be consequences

        • loeg 26 minutes ago
          Your full-throated defense of Mary Lau is completely beside the point (and for what it's worth, it would be a fifth life, not a "second" -- she killed an entire family of four). GP claimed that human drivers who commit vehicular manslaughter get the book; they don't.
          • mlyle 5 minutes ago
            > they don't.

            When there's significant extenuating circumstances or "the book" wouldn't serve the purposes of justice, they don't.

          • kelseyfrog 24 minutes ago
            What would 'getting the book' look like in concrete terms?
        • dekhn 8 minutes ago
          How do you get from "trying to park car" to 70 miles an hour? That does not seem consistent with the geometry of the accident.
        • xnx 51 minutes ago
          > What does a jail sentence deter?

          Other irresponsible drivers.

          • Aachen 46 minutes ago
            How would I know I'm going to kill someone on the road today and stop doing that thing?
            • xnx 36 minutes ago
              Don't drive intoxicated, tired, distracted, or physically impaired by age or other means.
        • tintor 36 minutes ago
          Apologised for taking lives of married couple and two babies?
          • orthecreedence 21 minutes ago
            Is it too much to ask for today's pedestrian to wear at least one piece of reflective clothing?
        • hiddencost 26 minutes ago
          People will change their behavior. The function of prison sentences is deterrence.
          • kelseyfrog 18 minutes ago
            Impulsivity is definitionally the absence of forethought. Deterrence doesn't affect crimes born from impulse.
            • JumpCrisscross 13 minutes ago
              > Deterrence doesn't affect crimes born from impulse

              And yet I've seen way more people call an Uber instead of drive home drunk not because they thought they'd kill someone, but because they didn't want a DUI.

              • loeg 10 minutes ago
                To put it another way: crimes of pure impulse, with zero forethought, are a subset of all crimes.
          • JumpCrisscross 25 minutes ago
            > function of prison sentences is deterrence

            As well as incapacitation and retribution.

          • loeg 25 minutes ago
            And incapacitation!
    • wongarsu 55 minutes ago
      In the US, 11 deaths per billion miles driven (or about 47k per year) is currently seen as an OK cost.

      More than twice as much per mile as places like Sweden and Switzerland, and still substantially more than places like Canada, Australia or Germany (all three in the 6-8 deaths per billion miles range). So it's not like there isn't room to improve. The effort to do so just isn't seen as worth the cost at the societal or government level

      Turning that into a monetary cost would change the ethics slightly, but it wouldn't be a monumental shift

      • JumpCrisscross 23 minutes ago
        > it's not like there isn't room to improve

        Losing one's license means destitution for many Americans. That places practical limits on enforcement compared with less car-oriented countries.

        • OptionOfT 7 minutes ago
          I'm from Belgium, and even with public transportation, there are a large group of people dependent on their driver's license.

          But if you ask someone if they'd drive without insurance, or without driver's license they look at you like you've asked them to do the impossible.

          Whereas in the US no-one bats an eye when that happens. Half the time the cops just issue a ticket, and don't even tow the car.

          And now people who obey the law need to take out extra insurance for under/uninsured motorists.

        • embedding-shape 7 minutes ago
          > Losing one's license means destitution for many Americans.

          That'd be the same for a Swede who lives in the middle of nowhere too. Although I'm sure both groups, if they'd loose their license, would continue driving anyways.

        • HDThoreaun 11 minutes ago
          Tons of options other than removing the ability to drive. More stringent enforcement, higher fines.
    • xnx 1 hour ago
      > If a human driver commits vehicular manslaughter, they get the book.

      If only! "10 Days In Jail For Drunken Driver Who Killed Cyclist Bobby Cann" https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20170126/old-town/ryne-san-h...

      • borski 9 minutes ago
        I almost feel bad for noticing this, but:

        > San Hamel was a partner in a business called AllYouCanDrink.com at the time. > > Cann, an experienced cyclist who once biked from New Hampshire to Chicago, was heading home from his job at Groupon the night he was killed.

        It looks like allyoucandrink.com now redirects to Groupon, in a decent bit of irony.

    • JumpCrisscross 19 minutes ago
      > If a human driver commits vehicular manslaughter, they get the book. What about AV?

      They get their licenses pulled statewide [1]. Cruise's single negligent manslaughter event carried more consequence than dozens of human cases combined.

      [1] https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/news-and-media/dmv-statement-o...

    • mmmore 1 hour ago
      > If a human driver commits vehicular manslaughter, they get the book.

      I wish this were true. Often they get off with a light punishment, or no punishment at all.

    • dyauspitr 6 minutes ago
      Then it’s an okay cost of doing business. $10 million is a lot of money and consequences for these companies are not purely legal they are also social consequences.
    • stavros 1 hour ago
      The CEO gets charged with manslaughter? I work in healthtech and the responsible individual is certainly personally liable for any harm that results from reckless behavior, it should be the same here.

      Same as if someone were driving, if a person just jumps in front of your car while you're driving under the limit/sober/etc, you aren't at fault, so the AV should also not be at fault if it couldn't reasonably avoid the harm. You balance these things, benefit to society vs harm to society, and you come to an acceptable tradeoff.

      • bdangubic 30 minutes ago
        > The CEO gets charged with manslaughter? I work in healthtech and the responsible individual is certainly personally liable for any harm that results from reckless behavior, it should be the same here.

        This is in like China, yes? Certainly not in the US of A, hence Luigi and all that…

      • mwt 37 minutes ago
        Could you provide examples of healthcare executives held personally liable for harm resulting from reckless decision-making? I have never heard of such a thing happening in healthcare so framing CEO responsibility as a solution to the problem sounds like a stretch to me.

        Some examples: Elizabeth Holmes got canned for lying to investors, not harming patients. Purdue Pharma plead guilty to misleading regulators and giving doctors kickbacks, not causing some hundreds of thousands of opioid deaths, but no Sackler family members were personally tried.

        • stavros 31 minutes ago
          I work in the UK, where regulations are different, and there have been a few cases. Maybe not as many as there should be, but in theory this is something that exists in law.
  • crazygringo 55 minutes ago
    Ticketing is a weird thing to do with driverless cars.

    If the violations are intentional and easily fixable, then just pass laws/regulations requiring AV's to follow rules or else cease operations entirely.

    If the violations are unintentional but happen only rarely in weird edge-case situations, then just set low frequency thresholds for them to be allowed, the same way we allow tiny amounts of rodent hairs in peanut butter. If AV companies exceed the threshold, then they get fined at first and eventually lose their permit -- but these aren't tickets for individual violations, but rather a yearly fine for going above the yearly threshold.

    If the violations are intentional but not easily fixable -- e.g. they're stopping where not allowed because there's no legal place to stop within 15 blocks -- then the laws/regulations are bad, and tickets are essentially an unfair tax. That's the case in my city where moving trucks are essentially illegal, because it's illegal to double-park them, but there's usually no legal parking available within any reasonable distance that movers could carry furniture. So you just know that the cost of moving includes a "tax" of a parking ticket, unfair as it is.

    Finally, if the violations are unintentional but happen all the time, the AV company should lose its permit because its software sucks.

    I don't see how ticketing AVs for individual violations makes any sense.

    EDIT: for those who think I'm letting AV companies get off too easily, it's precisely the opposite. I'm saying that if AV companies are violating traffic rules all the time and can't fix it, they should be banned. Ticketing is not the answer, because ticketing isn't holding these vehicles to a high enough standard. It's letting the companies get off the hook by merely paying occasional tickets instead of improving their software.

    • MostlyStable 45 minutes ago
      In all of your situations except for cases where no good legal option exists, ticketing is just the easier way to apply your suggested idea. It gives a direct incentive to the company to lower the rate as far as is possible. It doesn't allow some minimal amount without a fee, but that doesn't seem like that big of a deal.

      The biggest reason for the difference between Autonomous vehicles and peanut butter is that with autonomous vehicles, we already have a compliance system in place....cops. It's not designed for autonomous vehicles, and you are correct that it's not the way you would design it for the ground up for autonomous vehicles, but it's far better to accept the imperfections than to build some new, separate compliance and monitoring system on top of the existing one. The benefits aren't large enough to justify it.

      In the far future when the vast majority of vehicles are autonomous? Sure, probably worth scrapping to a new system (by then, my guess is that issues are rare enough to just not have a system at all and just use the legal system in the rare cases of large issues).

      Until then, ticketing in the case of traffic violations seems fine and good enough to me.

      • tempest_ 31 minutes ago
        At some point though those tickets need to actually hurt and no be just a cost of doing business.

        After enough violations humans get their license taken away. What happens after autonomous vehicle get enough violations?

        • HDThoreaun 1 minute ago
          > What happens after autonomous vehicle get enough violations?

          They put R&D resources toward not getting as many tickets and eventually fix their software to not get tickets? Self driving cars might profit $100/day. Getting tickets completely eats that and ticketing mega corps will be very popular politically so you better believe it will happen

    • cyanmagenta 44 minutes ago
      You make some good points, but here are some counterpoints:

      There is an existing infrastructure for ticketing by license plate, payment processing, collection, etc.

      You’re describing changes to the law, which require a bunch of procedural hurdles. It’s much easier for the DMV to just promulgate new rules that tap into existing infrastructure, as they did here.

      Also, how is the government supposed to assess whether these violations are intentional or not? Tickets are strict liability (you get the ticket if you do it regardless of intent, reasons, etc.) because it is easy to administer.

      • crazygringo 33 minutes ago
        Of course I'm describing changes to the law. AV's inherently require tons of changes to the law. They already have. Permits for AV companies operate under new law. That is not an obstacle.
    • wongarsu 48 minutes ago
      No, I think ticketing is the right thing to do. You set a law. Any instance of breaking that law costs money, so the AV company has an incentive to reduce the number of violations. The won't be able to bring the number of violations down to 0 just like we can't bring the number of cockroaches in chocolate down to 0, but that nonzero amount is just a regulatory cost they can decrease by getting closer to the goal of 0 violations.

      Obviously, we should also have the option to pull vehicles that are brazenly ignoring the law and just eating the cost of the tickets. Just like we do with drivers who do that. But that should be the second line of defense if regular monetary fines (tickets) fail

      • crazygringo 42 minutes ago
        The point is, with software you don't need tickets. Either the software is written to try to follow the law or it isn't. If it's trying, then we establish thresholds. If the company is actively trying to break the law, it should be shut down.

        Tickets are a silly, roundabout way to go about it. They make sense for human drivers because they're all running different independent "brain software" and it's unrealistic for minor violations to ban someone from driving. But with shared software across a fleet, you can just require the company to fix its driving software directly when possible. Ticketing is actually counterproductive, because it allows these companies to avoid many of these fixes if the tickets are infrequent enough.

        • xphos 29 minutes ago
          I feel like this trivializises all software development. It happens but 99% of development is done to follow the spec or law in this case. The failures or bugs are usually not intentional. You basically saying if 1 car in the fleet breaks the law shut them down? If thats a strawman im sorry but even in software algorithm have unintentional bugs and make mistakes. The same is true for human drivers but we dont revoke their licenses when they break the law we have a proportional penalty for break. If driverless cars are speeding its a slap on the wrist. If they are driving the wrong way down the freeway the penalty would be revoking licenses
        • JumpCrisscross 34 minutes ago
          > Either the software is written to try to follow the law or it isn't

          Then the real world intervenes. Nobody plans to block an intersection. But a lack of planning and shits given will put one into that position even without intention.

          > it allows these companies to avoid many of these fixes if the tickets are infrequent enough

          Sounds fine? Like, as long as AVs and human drivers share the roads, modulating enforcement with infraction frequency seems fine.

          • crazygringo 32 minutes ago
            > Sounds fine?

            A major benefit of AV's is that they're supposed to be better than human drivers, not breaking traffic laws just as often.

            • JumpCrisscross 28 minutes ago
              > major benefit of AV's is that they're supposed to be better than human drivers, not breaking traffic laws just as often

              If they're infrequently breaking minor traffic laws they may still be doing so (a) less frequently than humans or (b) with less consequence than when humans do it.

              I say this as someone who tends to drive the speed limit: our traffic laws were not written for perfect parsing.

    • RobRivera 48 minutes ago
      >If the violations are intentional and easily fixable, then just pass laws/regulations requiring AV's to follow the law or else cease operations entirely.

      I have to stop reading the rest of the comment right there.

      If the violations are intentional and easily fixable is an incredibly loaded presumption to start any type of conversation, dialogue, or debate. To the point, asking the question 'how do we qualify intention? How are we measuring difficulty of fix? Costs of payroll, computer, deployment, and potential regression testing? What about the very nature of the context that led up to it? Did an external 3rd party cutoff a robotaxi and require that the robotaxi veer into the oncoming traffic lane, bc sensors indicated it was the best decision to avoid a collision, prioritizing safety and human life over traffic law?

      What happens when following traffic law statistically leads to a greater risk of loss of life over violating the law?

      I must insist we move the dialogue upstream to reality as-is, and there is plenty to discuss there.

      I will in good faith issue a starting point: how should we measure the robotaxi driver license wrt suspension? Do we issue a point system that is averaged across the fleet, e.g. violations/car before suspending all operations until licensure evaluation? Personally I think that is a fair starting point amd am completely open minded to alternative views.

    • tintor 45 minutes ago
      Ticketing AVs for individual violations like human drivers is the only fair way.

      How would your proposal work for personal driverless cars, with/without custom modifications? ie. if my personal car commits violation on its way to pick me up

      • crazygringo 38 minutes ago
        I'm talking about AV fleets.

        If you purchase an AV car then similarly it's up to the state to regulate the manufacturer. How could you possibly be personally responsible for the fact that it ran a red light?

        And nobody should ever be allowed to personally modify an AV's software. Such a vehicle should never be allowed on the road.

    • luotuoshangdui 9 minutes ago
      Yes, I thought AV by design should not voilate traffic laws.
    • OtherShrezzing 38 minutes ago
      Seems to me like ticketing is a really simple proxy for everything you’ve just described.

      Why pass a thousand new laws when the existing laws have an enforcement mechanism?

    • squibonpig 37 minutes ago
      They want to make money from the tickets
    • delfinom 49 minutes ago
      Ok, but why are AVs getting a break on the same tickets a human gets no "low frequency threshold" for them to be allowed.

      If a AV runs a red light or a stop sign, it should be the same penalty, period.

      If AV companies want to avoid the tickets, they can make their claimed superior drivers avoid violating the law.

      • crazygringo 40 minutes ago
        No, you're missing the point.

        If an AV is regularly running red lights or stop signs, it should be a much worse penalty. It shouldn't be permitted to operate at all.

        It shouldn't just be given occasional tickets. Tickets are not the right enforcement mechanism.

        • Ekaros 14 minutes ago
          They should be ticketed and stopped from operating after certain threshold. And tickets should have some reasonable multiplier as they are much more capable paying say at absolute minimum 1000x. Only high enough tickets are efficient against corporations. As their shareholders sadly can not get those tickets.
    • booleandilemma 46 minutes ago
      I think part of ticketing is the state makes money off of it. If they just shut these companies down no one benefits.
      • YokoZar 33 minutes ago
        Ticketing in California generally results in revenue going directly to the enforcing locality, not the state. It's an important difference, and why you tend to get things like speed traps for passing motorists
    • croes 38 minutes ago
      Traffic has rules, you violate them you get a ticket
  • nallana 55 minutes ago
    They haven’t been all this time? Damn — what a time to be a robot
  • SilverElfin 2 minutes ago
    I don’t disagree with needing some sort of consequence for bad driverless actions. But I distrust the motivation. Maybe California is just looking for more revenue sources after rampantly mismanaging their state and letting corruption and fraud continue.
  • HeavyStorm 25 minutes ago
    _begins_? Like, before, they wouldn't get tickets?
  • fourspacetabs 1 hour ago
    As a Waymo (and other driverless car) supporter, this seems like an obviously good thing, right? I’m a little surprised this wasn’t possible before given the amount of regulatory scrutiny (correctly) applied to these companies.

    Archive link in case of random paywalling like I got: https://archive.ph/xHMDO

    • loeg 1 hour ago
      Yes.
    • subhobroto 1 hour ago
      > As a Waymo (and other driverless car) supporter, this seems like an obviously good thing, right? I’m a little surprised this wasn’t possible before given the amount of regulatory scrutiny (correctly) applied to these companies

      Not necessarily. I went into a bit more detail in my own comment but it might be useful to think that when regulations are written keeping in mind multibillion dollar automobile companies, what the effect of those regulations on a person maintaining their own vehicles might be.

      Consider that your Waymo got ticketed, but you had flashed it with a "no customer telemetry" firmware. Once Waymo gets the ticket, they flag your car as having "unauthorized" software and now the ball's in your court that the reason why your Waymo got ticketed has nothing to do with the telemetry feature that tells Waymo what radio stations you were listening to.

      Also, when regulations are written keeping in mind multibillion dollar automobile companies, the ticket isn't going to cost $500.

      • infecto 54 minutes ago
        I would hope any type of software modification would put more of the responsibility the owner.
        • MostlyStable 41 minutes ago
          I'm of the opinion that if one owns an autonomous vehicle, regardless of software modification or not (which should be allowed), then one is fully responsible for it's actions. If one doesn't trust the software provided by the manufacturer, don't buy/use it. Once one chooses to buy it and operate it, then it's that person.

          Possible exceptions would be in the case that, after purchase, the manufacturer pushes a software update that meaningfully changes the behavior in such a way that it causes issues. In that case, both A) the manufacturer should be responsible and B) the owner should have the option to get some kind of compensation.

  • dotcoma 1 hour ago
    It’s about time!
  • kylehotchkiss 23 minutes ago
    maybe Tesla can put that weird robot that connects the charging connector to the car to use by building a robot that can give the police a hand to place the ticket into
  • subhobroto 1 hour ago
    UPDATE (can't respond to the two subcomments below due to post throttling, so I'm updating this comment instead)

    > the car is basically a taxi and the taxi service is to blame for any mistakes

    @skybrian - Agreed! but if you read the article, the CA DMV is ticketing the manufacturer, not the operator.

    None of my concerns hold if the operator was ticketed - infact, existing regulations are set up exactly that way, so no new regulation was even necessary. Something's not adding up.

    > Right now, no one can independently own and operate an AV the way Waymo or Tesla does

    @ourspacetabs - Sure but the regulation seems to be specifically addressed at the manufacturer, not the operator.

    I would have no concern if the regulation was addressed to the operator. The article atleast doesn't imply that's the case.

    ---

    > The state's Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) has announced new regulations on autonomous vehicles (AVs), including a process for police to issue a "notice of AV noncompliance" directly to the car's manufacturer.

    > Under the new rules, police can cite AV companies when their vehicles commit moving violations. The rules will also require the companies to respond to calls from police and other emergency officials within 30 seconds, and will issue penalties if their vehicles enter active emergency zones.

    These are new frontiers in automotive regulation. Typically, if a car failed because of a manufacturer issue, the driver would be ticketed. For example: if Hyundai sold vehicles where the engine would explode around 50k miles and that caused an accident, the driver of the vehicle would be ticketed for it.

    Now if we take the human out of it, it is Hyundai that would be ticketed for it. Insurance companies are certainly going to take notice and adjust their risk models accordingly.

    I imagine there will be a lot of fingerpointing by the manufacturer towards customers.

    In the worst case, this is the end of customers servicing their own autonomous vehicles.

    If we imagine that most vehicles in the next 15 years will be autonomous, this would mean customers would have to handle regulation aimed at multibillion dollar companies, if they were to service their own autonomous vehicles, or give up on servicing their own autonomous vehicles entirely and just rent them instead.

    • fourspacetabs 46 minutes ago
      Not sure I agree. The clear boundary here to me is who owns and is operating the vehicle. Waymo both owns and operates their vehicles, it’s a taxi service, you wouldn’t say a Waymo rider is operating a vehicle and therefore deserves the ticket. Right now, no one can independently own and operate an AV the way Waymo or Tesla does.

      When that happens someday, then the ticket would go to the owner/operator of the vehicle - whoever bought the car. If you get a ticket due to something dumb your personally owned Waymo did, wouldn’t you pursue that case against Waymo separately, the same way you’d pursue Hyundai for selling you a car whose engine blew up after 50k miles?

    • skybrian 39 minutes ago
      It seems pretty reasonable to me that when you're not driving, the car is basically a taxi and the taxi service is to blame for any mistakes. The car manufacturer isn't just making cars anymore. It's providing a service.

      Perhaps they could sell the car to a different taxi service, though?

  • umanwizard 57 minutes ago
    That is great, they should also start ticketing human-driven cars that violate traffic laws too!
  • zdw 1 hour ago
    Ideally the fees would be similar to the Norway model, where some tickets are tied to the income of the driver, in this case the pre-tax earnings of the company that created the driverless car.
    • Aachen 1 hour ago
      That can make sense (opinions differ) for individuals, but it's not like the company is advertising with "we get you there at 1.2x legal speed". They're not competing on that; they're not choosing to do this on purpose like an individual might choose to speed (for example because of economic incentives if their hourly price is high)

      If they were, then it makes sense to fine them to some multiple of the benefit they got from this advertising tactic, but as it is, I don't see why it should be different from anyone else's ticket. The company isn't likely to enjoy a flood of this administrative work, besides the cost of the actual fines, so they'll work to minimise them anyway

    • asdfasgasdgasdg 1 hour ago
      Assuming you divide it down to the earnings per car, that makes perfect sense. Of course right now they aren't making any profit at all, and by the time it is relevant it is likely that the cars will commit substantially no violations at all.
      • orthecreedence 1 minute ago
        > Of course right now they aren't making any profit at all

        I imagine you'd do it based on revenue-per-car, not profit-per-car. Just as the tickets are income based, not income - expenses based.

    • mathcartney 1 hour ago
      I think this could be a good compromise. Could have a floor value but the ceiling can vary accordingly.
    • cma 1 hour ago
      Isn't Norway only for drunk driving? Finland has it for massive speed excesses, but it is based on net taxable income taking out business expenses for taxi drivers, and Waymo is still negative.

      If they become profitable you'd want to normalize by number of miles, unless you just want an incentive system to get more people on the road (extra drivers) and increase chance of humans suffering road injuries to boost employment in an internal service sector.

      But even then coming out with a more efficient fleet than a competitor for higher margin would be penalized. You'd rather disincentivize skimping on safety for margin and not disincentivize better maintenance and fuel economy.

    • Teever 45 minutes ago
      Agreed. We need to look at reforming fines in general.

      Fines should be scaled to income and the value of the vehicle and should exponentially increase for reoffense when in the same catagory of offense.