Tesla's Autopilot was not to blame for fatal 2019 Model 3 crash, jury finds

A California jury has found that Tesla was not at fault for a fatal 2019 crash that allegedly involved its Autopilot system, in the first US trial yet for a case claiming its software directly caused a death. The lawsuit alleged Tesla knowingly shipped out cars with a defective Autopilot system, leading to a crash that killed a Model 3 owner and severely injured two passengers, Reuters reports.

Per the lawsuit, 37-year-old Micah Lee was driving his Tesla Model 3 on a highway outside of Los Angeles at 65 miles per hour when it turned sharply off the road and slammed into a palm tree before catching fire. Lee died in the crash. The company was sued for $400 million plus punitive damages by Lee’s estate and the two surviving victims, including a boy who was 8 years old at the time and was disemboweled in the accident, according to an earlier report from Reuters.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs argued that Tesla sold Lee defective, “experimental” software when he bought a Model 3 in 2019 that was billed to have full self-driving capability. The FSD system was and still is in beta. In his opening statement, their attorney Jonathan Michaels also said that the “excessive steering command is a known issue at Tesla.”

Tesla’s defense argued that there was no such defect, and that an analysis cited by the plaintiffs’ lawyers identifying a steering issue was actually looking for problems that were theoretically possible. A fix to prevent it from ever happening was engineered as a result of that analysis, according to the company. Tesla blamed human error for the crash, pointing to tests that showed Lee had consumed alcohol before getting in the car, and argued that there’s no certainty Autopilot was in use at the time.

The jury ultimately found there was no defect, and Tesla was cleared on Tuesday. Tesla has faced lawsuits over its Autopilot system in the past, but this is the first involving a fatality. It’s scheduled to go on trial for several others in the coming months, and today’s ruling is likely to set the tone for those ahead.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/teslas-autopilot-was-not-to-blame-for-fatal-2019-model-3-crash-jury-finds-210643301.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Tesla’s Autopilot was not to blame for fatal 2019 Model 3 crash, jury finds

Two artists suing AI image makers never registered works with Copyright Office

Two artists suing AI image makers never registered works with Copyright Office

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Artists suing Stability AI, Deviant Art, and Midjourney hit a roadblock this week in their quest to prove allegations that AI image generators illegally use copyrighted works to mimic unique artistic styles without compensation or consent.

On Monday, US district judge William H. Orrick dismissed many of the artists’ claims after finding that the proposed class-action complaint “is defective in numerous respects.” Perhaps most notably, two of the three named plaintiffs—independent artist Kelly McKernan and concept artist/professional illustrator Karla Ortiz—had apparently never registered any of their disputed works with the Copyright Office. Orrick dismissed their claims with prejudice, dropping them from the suit.

But while McKernan and Ortiz can no longer advance their claims, the lawsuit is far from over. Lead plaintiff, cartoonist, and illustrator Sarah Andersen will have the next 30 days to amend her complaint and keep the copyright dispute alive.

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Source: Ars Technica – Two artists suing AI image makers never registered works with Copyright Office

Make Way for Another New Horror-Centric Streamer: Nightstream

Nightstream began as a virtual film festival in 2020, aimed at film fans hungry for new content during the height of the pandemic. But it’s now shifted its focus to better reflect the current entertainment landscape, and today announced a re-launch as a “year-round curated genre film VOD platform,” with titles…

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Source: Gizmodo – Make Way for Another New Horror-Centric Streamer: Nightstream

Google Plans RISC-V Android Tools In 2024, Wants Developers To 'Be Ready'

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Android is slowly entering the RISC-V era. So far we’ve seen Google say it wants to give the up-and-coming CPU architecture “tier-1” support in Android, putting RISC-V on equal footing with Arm. Qualcomm has announced the first mass-market RISC-V Android chip, a still-untitled Snapdragon Wear chip for smartwatches. Now Google has announced a timeline for developer tools via the Google Open Source Blog. The last post is titled “Android and RISC-V: What you need to know to be ready.”

Getting the Android OS and app ecosystem to support a new architecture is going to take an incredible amount of work from Google and developers, and these tools are laying the foundation for that work. First up, Google already has the “Cuttlefish” virtual device emulator running, including a gif of it booting up. This isn’t the official “Android Emulator” — which is targeted at app developers doing app development — Cuttlefish is a hardware emulator for Android OS development. It’s the same idea as the Android Emulator but for the bottom half of the tech stack — the kernel, framework, and hardware bits. Cuttlefish lets Google and other Android OS contributors work on a RISC-V Android build without messing with an individual RISC-V device. Google says it’s working well enough now that you can download and emulate a RISC-V device today, though the company warns that nothing is optimized yet.

The next step is getting the Android Emulator (for app developers) up and running, and Google says: “By 2024, the plan is to have emulators available publicly, with a full feature set to test applications for various device form factors!” The nice thing about Android is that most app code is written with no architecture in mind — it’s all just Java/Kotlin. So once the Android RunTime starts spitting out RISC-V code, a lot of app code should Just Work. That means most of the porting work will need to go into things written in the NDK, the native developer kit, like libraries and games. The emulator will still be great for testing, though.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Google Plans RISC-V Android Tools In 2024, Wants Developers To ‘Be Ready’

Evil Week: How to Spy on People With Your iPhone

Welcome to Evil Week, our annual dive into all the slightly sketchy hacks we’d usually refrain from recommending. Want to weasel your way into free drinks, play elaborate mind games, or, er, launder some money? We’ve got all the info you need to be successfully unsavory.

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Source: LifeHacker – Evil Week: How to Spy on People With Your iPhone

Here's How To Make Google Scrub Your Personal Data From Search Results

Here's How To Make Google Scrub Your Personal Data From Search Results
You ever Googled yourself? No, it’s not an improper question—we’re talking about the actual process of putting your own name into Google and seeing what comes up. You might be surprised. Shady websites charge fees to list huge databases of personal information, matching names with addresses and phone numbers that may no longer be accurate

Source: Hot Hardware – Here’s How To Make Google Scrub Your Personal Data From Search Results

Trek to the Stars With October's Most Compelling Spaceflight Images

From capturing precious asteroid samples and exploring volcanic moons to navigating mysterious toxic blobs and portraying fictional Space Force battles, October was a captivating month in spaceflight and space exploration, as these images attest.

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Source: Gizmodo – Trek to the Stars With October’s Most Compelling Spaceflight Images

This Baldur’s Gate 3 Race Prefers To Date Women, Use Men For ‘Propagation’

Baldur’s Gate 3, Larian Studios’ king-size role-playing game, has tons of intricate lore by virtue of being based on Dungeons & Dragons. Nearly three months after its August 3 release date, players are still discovering hidden information about the game’s mechanics, romanceable characters, and storied fantasy races.…

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Source: Kotaku – This Baldur’s Gate 3 Race Prefers To Date Women, Use Men For ‘Propagation’

Woman Gets New Cat—and Months of Diarrhea, in Possible Medical First

A woman’s newly adopted cat may have brought her an unwelcome gift: a bacterial germ that caused her months of diarrhea. In a new case report this month, doctors say that the woman’s bout of recurrent Clostridioides difficile could have been fueled by her cat, who also tested positive for the bacteria. Thankfully,…

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Source: Gizmodo – Woman Gets New Cat—and Months of Diarrhea, in Possible Medical First

Why the FDA Keeps Recalling Eye Drops

You might be tired of hearing about eye drop recalls, but the FDA has issued a new list of eye drops to stop using. This time, it includes store brand lubricant eye drops from Target, CVS, and Rite Aid. They haven’t officially been recalled, but the FDA has recommended a recall based on tests that revealed potential…

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Source: LifeHacker – Why the FDA Keeps Recalling Eye Drops

Shawn Levy Really Wants You to Know Logan Matters to Deadpool 3

Just because Hugh Jackman is returning as Wolverine doesn’t mean he didn’t die already. From the day it was announced that Jackman was joining Ryan Reynolds in the upcoming third Deadpool movie, the stars were adamant that the events of Logan, James Mangold’s 2017 classic, happened. “Logan died in Logan,” Reynolds said

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Source: Gizmodo – Shawn Levy Really Wants You to Know Logan Matters to Deadpool 3

WeChat Deemed a Security Risk, Banned in Canada

Canada banned WeChat on government-issued phones on Monday, roughly two years after the Biden administration lifted American bans on the Chinese “everything” app. The Chief Information Officer of Canada says WeChat presents an unacceptable level of risk to privacy and security, in a press release.

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Source: Gizmodo – WeChat Deemed a Security Risk, Banned in Canada

Godzilla Day Celebrations Are Coming to Streaming

Today may be Halloween, but there’s another big holiday this week: Godzilla Day, which marks the anniversary of Godzilla’s release on November 3, 1954. As is tradition, Toho International has an array of festivities planned, including some that require you to stomp no further than your own couch.

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Source: Gizmodo – Godzilla Day Celebrations Are Coming to Streaming

Tesla Autopilot not responsible for 2019 fatal crash, jury says

Close-up of Tesla Motors logo against a bright blue sky in Pleasanton, California, 2018

Enlarge (credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

Tesla’s controversial driver assistance feature Autopilot has received another pass. On Tuesday a jury in California found that Autopilot was not to blame for a 2019 crash in Riverside County that killed the driver and left his wife and son severely injured. That marks the second time this year a jury has found that Autopilot was not responsible for a serious crash.

The case was filed by the two survivors of the Riverside crash and alleged that an Autopilot malfunction caused Micah Lee’s Tesla Model 3 to veer off a highway at 65 mph (105 km/h) before it struck a tree and burst into flames. Lee died in the crash, and his wife and then-8-year-old son were seriously injured; as a result the plaintiffs asked for $400 million plus punitive damages.

But Tesla denied Autopilot was defective and claimed that Lee had been drinking alcohol before the crash. Nine members of the jury agreed with Tesla after four days of deliberation.

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Source: Ars Technica – Tesla Autopilot not responsible for 2019 fatal crash, jury says

Apple's App Charges Violate EU Antitrust Law, Dutch Agency Says

Apple could be forced to scale back its App Store fees for developers after one of the European Union’s antitrust watchdogs said its commissions violate the bloc’s rules. From a report: In the latest twist in a long-running clash between the Dutch Authority for Consumers & Markets and the US tech giant, officials ruled that Apple’s commission on certain app subscriptions are an abuse of the company’s market power. In a confidential decision seen by Bloomberg, the Dutch regulator said Apple’s rules unfairly target companies that offer subscription services, such as Match Group’s dating app Tinder, which has to pay high commission rates on app sales, unlike ones that don’t have paid digital content.

Apple harms such companies “by charging them an additional and inexplicably higher fee,” according to the Dutch decision, which was sent in July. Apple had earlier offered to reduce app sale commission in the Netherlands from 30% to 27%, but the ACM’s confidential findings state this offer doesn’t go far enough. The decision could pave the wave for greater antitrust scrutiny across the 27-nation EU on the fairness of Apple’s fee structure for different apps. The European Commission in Brussels is already investigating how Apple restricts apps from informing users of cheaper subscriptions outside the app store.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Apple’s App Charges Violate EU Antitrust Law, Dutch Agency Says