Silicon Valley wants us to believe that their autonomous products are a kind of self-guided magic, but the technology is clearly not there yet. A quick peak behind the curtain has consistently revealed a product base that, at a minimum, is still deeply reliant on human workforces.

  • Skeezix@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    To take a job at Tesla is to be ok with getting shitcanned at any time for any reason

  • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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    12 hours ago

    This always the solution to these big, over promised AI projects… “what if i just pay someone a pittance to do the hard part.”

  • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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    13 hours ago

    Remotely-driven robotaxis seem like the worst option available. I’m imagining a whole cubicle farm LARPing GTA5.

    • Mak'@pawb.social
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      15 hours ago

      What’s hilariously tragic is that he could very likely have his full self-driving if he would just shut his shit-spewing asshole of a mouth for a hot second, and spend some of his ungodly billions on the problem.

      There are incredibly bright people out there who can make this stuff a reality. But, it takes paying them well, not shit-talking or overruling them, and giving them the environment for success—e.g., not taking away the radar from the cars.

      He just wants to talk a big game without spending any real effort or money on the problem. And, it’s just sad, because he could have his FSD and look like a genius.

        • Mak'@pawb.social
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          13 hours ago

          It may well be a matter of opinion whether Tesla, even operating at its highest potential, could now overtake the likes of BYD, which is getting extensive help from its government. But, it’s reasonably clear that Tesla’s chances get thinner with every bad decision of Musk’s.

          He fucked with the engineering, chasing pennies on critical components, like the lidar. He fucked with the crown jewel of the company—its Supercharger network—by destroying the team, and thereby slowing down rollouts and critical maintenance. He ran his mouth off and chased away folks—like me—who would have otherwise bought, by espousing pants-on-head-crazy crypto-bro viewpoints. Hell, his idea of PR is a poop emoji auto-responder.

          It’s just frustrating to see such a great concept—the ubiquitous electric car—be fucked up so badly by the person with the most means to succeed.

          • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            It is almost like he is not a genius and just has generational wealth.

            I mean when was the last time “the person who knows the most about manufacturing in the world” spent all their free time doing drugs, posting on Twitter, and fucking his employees trying to pump out kid number thirteen.

            There is a word for someone who fucks it all up but still is left holding the money. Conman, that is the word.

            • Vlyn@lemmy.zip
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              12 hours ago

              Don’t forget about spending thousands of hours in Diablo 4. And now he’s eyeing up Path of Exile 2.

              Hard working my ass, he spends more time on Twitter than I do at work.

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      To be fair it is probably not on purpose. He is just too stupid to make realistic estimates of what will be possible.

  • jettrscga@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    This sounds exactly like Amazon’s “Just walk out” grocery store concept that actually required remote supervising by workers in India.

    • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      20 hours ago

      I’m starting to get a bit annoyed by takes like this.

      Of course people had to check the automated system. that’s how they are debugged and trained.

      The newsworthy part is just that they missed their target goal of reviewed sales. In the end of the trial they still needed 70% review rate instead of their goal of 5%.

      The system was still fully automated. But some needed checks after the sales happened. That’s what trials are there for

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        Or you could, you know, pay a person a living wage to be physically present at the store to assist shoppers and review the sales.

        Or, hear me out. Maybe a 70% review requirement is not automation at all. Just saying.

        • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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          19 hours ago

          You could, yes. And that should be the criticism.

          If you attack them on bullshit terms, you do exactly what they want and they can go “well, those idiots don’t even know what they are talking about”.

          Maybe a 70% review requirement is not automation at all

          And amazon agrees. which is why they closed the experiment down

      • friendlymessage@feddit.org
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        16 hours ago

        70% instead of 5% is so far away that it’s pretty clear their system isn’t working. I would understand your criticism if we were talking about 10% vs. 5% but not with these numbers it’s clear this system never worked, even in a testing environment

      • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 hours ago

        While you aren’t wrong that every automated system needs human oversight and occasional intervention, when the average person hears “fully automated” or any of the many marketing terms used for these things lately they are going to take it pretty close to face value.

        It also doesn’t help that it was largely marketed and reported on as if it wasn’t an experiment, but a solved and working “product”.

        Every system will have its own requirements and acceptable margins for error and required interventions, but I think most people would feel that even the one in twenty (5%) goal is a lot for a project like the Amazon automated shops. It would be a lot for any of the automations I come into contact with (and have built) at my job, but admittedly I’m not doing anything as remotely novel or as complicated as an unattended shop.

        Beyond that, people have a lot more reasons to dislike these systems than just the amount of human intervention and I think they’re just going to jump on whichever one is currently being discussed in order to express it. Like displeasure that the teleoperation positions are outsourced the way they are, taking even more jobs away from the local population.

  • dumbass@leminal.space
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    18 hours ago

    It’s been 7 hours of driving random people around the city, name after name I’ll forget quick, then I see a name that brings my blood to a boil, an old bully/tormentor, I take over the car and deliver the script perfectly, he doesn’t remember my voice, why would he? We head off and he zones out staring at his phone, completely oblivious to the fact he is heading towards his doom, we come to a train line and my internet connection ‘drops’, causing the vehicle to come to a complete stop, a minute later a large train smashes into a the car, completely destroying it and killing them before I can successfully reconnect to them.

    And that’s how to get away with murder.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      It’s so much easier to get away with shooting someone than this. Also internet going out wouldn’t cause the car to stop.

      Edit : Not to mention the person can still get out of a car

        • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Once again, they don’t remotely (pun intended) have that capability, and how do you plan on them not tracking it back to you? Much easier to use one of the possible 500m guns in America.

          Your idea gets a high dollar investigation into how it happened. With the company at risk for millions/billions in losses looking for the culprit. It’s all nonsense.

  • dirthawker0@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    Eh. There are driverless taxis working really well in some cities already. I felt very safe riding in a waymo. Tesla is way late to that party, who cares?

  • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    23 hours ago

    The job post also notes that such a teleoperation center requires “building highly optimized low latency reliable data streaming over unreliable transports in the real world.” Tele-operators can be “transported” into the robotaxi via a “state-of-the-art VR rig,” it adds.

    Oh man that’s pretty hilarious for “autonomous vehicles”

    Tesla would not be the first robotaxi company to use this method. In fact, it’s an industry standard. It was previously reported that Cruise, the robotaxi company owned by General Motors, was employing remote human assistants to troubleshoot when its vehicles ran into trouble

    Oh, so this is actually completely normal and should not be news worthy…

    • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      Remote human intervention when automated systems fail should be expected and required to be honest with current technology. There are simply too many edge cases in the real world, even with the trillions of miles Tesla has trained their system on.

      • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Remote human intervention when automated systems fail should be expected and required to be honest with current technology.

        The “human in the loop” is one of those things that sounds good but isn’t at all in reality.

        https://pluralistic.net/2024/10/30/a-neck-in-a-noose/

        A human was literally sitting at the wheel as Uber’s taxi ran someone over.

        Driving is nothing but edge cases, and that’s why maybe paying drivers to drive people around is better than some half-baked AI driving people under trucks and hoping a call center employee is paying enough attention to bail them out.

      • TheFrogThatFlies@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        When will the intervention be called upon? How we react is defined by the context we have. Imagine being dropped into a pre accident situation without any context.

        • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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          21 hours ago

          No idea, and I doubt they’ll ever publicly say.

          Direct human intervention is definitely something other companies could be doing more of. Waymo especially given all the videos of them getting stuck, sometimes en masse.

          • errer@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            I had heard through a friend who works at Waymo they currently have 1.5 engineers per car. Ideally, if you want a self-driving car company to be financially successful, that number should be significantly less than 1. These companies are heavily propped up by VC money and it’s not at all clear they’ll achieve that goal.

            • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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              18 hours ago

              I find that 1.5 number amazingly hard to believe unless those engineers are never actually watching the vehicles while in use, in which case the number means absolutely nothing. The number of engineers per vehicle on staff means absolutely nothing if they aren’t the ones monitoring them for issues while in use. You might as well say you have 50 employees per vehicle, including all office workers, executives, janitorial staff, etc. because it means nothing.

              Given videos like this where there are dozens of them in complete chaos. Human intervention would easily clear that in a couple minutes, instead they just kept stacking up.

              • Pieisawesome@lemmy.world
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                13 hours ago

                Waymo, uniquely, never remotely drives their vehicles. You’d have to wait for a safety driver to show up in order to help the vehicle

                Other companies do remotely drive

    • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      It’s normal in the industry but the industry likes to tell the public otherwise so from time to time these articles pop up.

      Amazon’s just walk out shop, with AI looking with cameras what you bought, was actually run by indians remotely because the automation didn’t quite work. Food delivery robots are run by people in low cost areas. Over guy runs multiple robots with a pont-and-click interface. That kind of thing. I’m sure autonomy is worked on but it’s not fully autonomous yet.

    • Jrockwar@feddit.uk
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      21 hours ago

      Two notes on this as someone who works in the sector.

      It’s “completely normal”, but only if you’re not having a full time driver for each vehicle, which is what the article sounds like… Then the vehicles wouldn’t be autonomous, they’d just be teleoperated.

      And the second part, why is this an industry standard and why are investors ok with it? Imagine you have a product (robotaxi) that is autonomous but can’t deal with absolutely everything on its own (not even Waymo is that advanced). The key component that you need to build into the system is the ability to come to a stop safely, and be recovered remotely. Then these “teleoperators” can recover the vehicles if/when they fail, and given a sufficiently low failure rate, you can have one operator for each X vehicles. Even if this is more than “0 drivers”, having 1 driver per 10 vehicles is a massive cost saving. Plus zooming out and thinking of other things than robotaxis, there are sectors like mining where they don’t care (that much) about the number of drivers - their primary goal is to have the drivers away from a dangerous mine. They can save money from simplifying operations that way.