- First Name
- pablo
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2025
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- 558
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- Location
- birmingham, alabama
- Vehicles
- 2021 mustang mach e select, model 3 performance
- Banned
- #151
Waymo mapped it and that's why it happened.A good point (and your other post was full of great points too that will trigger the anti-ADAS people). Waymos are known for taking SAFE but unusual shortcuts. The interesting part of that is that they were not told to do this, and somehow "learned" to do it. One example is that one drove through the Waymo storage/charging/service facility to get to the other side. It shouldn't do that, but was also perfectly safe. I'd pay extra for that tour!
In the case of FSD it "finds" a shortcut from the google satellite images. Basically tesla drives using maps, using AI vision and using satellite images. All 3 contribute to where the car decides to go.
The likelyhood that the car saw the train track in the satellite view as a shortcut is very, very low. But it would only be even remotely believable if the destination matched the shortcut.
FSD is driving for billions of miles. Freak events like these don't just happen one time and never happen again
The guy who flipped his car over and hit a tree. If it happened to him (which turned out to be fake) then it would have happened at least one other time
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