In the automobile arena, the race is on to perfect and market the first self-driving car. By many accounts, Google is leading the pack with its fleet of autonomous vehicles which cruise around California roadways, driving themselves though with an operator in the vehicle at all times. The vehicles work by syncing GPS enabled technology with the steering, accelerating, and braking functions of a typical car, utilizing sensors around the vehicle so that changing traffic conditions, hazards in the road, and even congestion can be monitored.
Google has previously disclosed 17 minor accidents involving its self-driving vehicles on public roadways but has always said that the collisions were never the fault of the Google cars themselves; rather, in each instance, Google has blamed the actions of other drivers, some of whom admitted liability, in the creation of the collisions. None of those crashes were serious.
However, now Google has revealed a new accident and has accepted at least partial liability for the traffic crash which took place on February 14, 2016.
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