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Google Driverless Car Hit from Behind, Again

By Michelle F. Davis | July 17, 2015

A Google Inc. driverless car was involved in the fleet’s first collision to result in injury.

One of Google’s vehicles braked during a green light because of congestion, and the car behind hit it at 17 mph and lost its bumper, Google said. The most-recent incident occurred during evening rush hour on July 1 in Mountain View, California, where the search giant is based.

“Everyone in both vehicles was okay, except for a bit of minor whiplash,” Chris Urmson, Google’s director for self- driving cars, wrote in a blog item posted Thursday.

Google last month said it would issue monthly reports about its self-driving automobiles after a shareholder asked the company to be more transparent about accidents involving the technology.

The company says robotic vehicles drive better than humans do and will reduce deaths caused by cars driven by people.

Google’s hands-free cars have been hit by other drivers 14 times since the project began in 2009, according to the company.

“Our self-driving cars are being hit surprisingly often by other drivers who are distracted and not paying attention to the road,” Urmson wrote.

–With assistance from Brian Womack in San Francisco.

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Topics Auto

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Latest Comments

  • July 21, 2015 at 7:32 am
    Bill says:
    insexpert, you are making an excellent reason to do away with human driven vehicles. These situations sound like human driving error problems not a driverless car problem. Isn... read more
  • July 20, 2015 at 6:25 pm
    Baxtor says:
    I think more people would take road trips to their destinations vs flying with driverless vehicles. Just think, drive until you get tired, take a nap, then wake up again and ... read more
  • July 20, 2015 at 4:09 pm
    SWFL Agent says:
    We may never get to point where all cars are driverless but I could envision autos that are capable of being driven in both diver & driverless modes. There could be certai... read more

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