Recently a man in Arizona was charged with intentionally crashing a Waymo minivan into another driverless car by the company. That’s right, an employee crashed two of the company’s cars and was charged and arrested. Boy, if anyone gets into accident on the road and gets charged and arrested, the jails would of been with a lot of petty criminals by now.

Let’s take a look at the driverless cars. They are the future of technology no matter if they are gas or electric or diesel. As long as they operate on the road without a driver it’s fine. Although, few things needs to be considered.

How are drivers operating them such as behind a smartphone/TV/computer/speaker? For most part when they are automated, the cars will drive by themselves and some will be manually by the driver operating it.

Another factor, is the data and artificial intelligence information of the cars protected? As Waymo driver intentionally caused the accident, if there was one of Waymo cars on each road in the U.S and the Russians hacked into Waymo. The Russians could cause massive traffic and delays on our commute.

Next factor is, will the taxi drivers utilize their car as source of income to make more money? These cars can operate for drivers while they are multitasking and still making money as well. Which this comes up that how the passengers will be checked on? Camera/Sensors? These need to be considered.

Finally, will the driverless cars be adoptable to the streets? The better questions is are they going to use GPS and Google Maps to learn the streets lights, bumps, and roadside construction? It is important to when to slow down and when to know where to go on the road.

These factors are necessary to work on to improve the driverless driving. Although, there is a lot of steps until we are with driverless cars. Until then, the drivers and the automakers dealers need to find a way to make their money from this switch since Google, Uber, and Waymo won’t probably need a dealer selling them and driving them for the customers!