Instigator / Pro
6
1499
rating
52
debates
35.58%
won
Topic
#5538

Make it illegal for people to drive in Fully self-driving cars in most cases

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
9
Better sources
4
6
Better legibility
2
3
Better conduct
0
3

After 3 votes and with 15 points ahead, the winner is...

Intelligence_06
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
4,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
None
Contender / Con
21
1737
rating
172
debates
73.26%
won
Description

Burden of Proof is shared

Pro: In the vast majority of cases, fully self driving cars should not be allowed to be driven by people. Once they get in and start the car, setting specific destinations or requirements, the AI will take over and not allow them to drive. If the human is caught driving the car themself, they will be fined for a certain amount of money. Using the software to change the destination does not count as the human driving

Con: In the vast majority of cases we shouldn't punish people for driving their fully self driving cars

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@gugigor

What you could have actually done is to bring up: "Well what about taxi drivers? They do what I tell them to do, they take me to wherever I instruct them to, just like I do with Alexa. In this case, following your logic, shouldn't *I* be the one that is driving the taxi, not the so-called taxi driver?"

This would essentially derail into whether AIs should be held morally responsible in any circumstances under any level of intelligence. Because we all know, the difference between an actual taxi driver and a rice cooker is that a rice cooker is not sentient. Seeing how unclear the field of AI ethics currently is (trust me), doing that would actually give you an edge of winning especially since I don't know a lot either about moral philosophy and I can't say I do.

The scary thing is: The closer an AI is sentient as an actual human (such as a taxi driver), the closer it will get to being fully able to control the car better than we do while being trustworthy. Basically, that would mean we ought to treat it more as a buddy such as Chad the next block over than a tool like Alexa or Siri. Being able to use this example to your advantage might as well can cost me the win, and I don't think I can do anything about it in the near future.

I don't know how to survive in muddled water. I just scavenge the waterbed to seek solid pillars protruding off the shores. All you have to do is to push me off one of those.

But thanks for the concession anyways.

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@Intelligence_06

I know you are going to come up with some wild interpretation of the topic, especially given all that description.

The fact Pro put all of this in his Stance rather than outside as general description of the setup of this debate makes it hilarious.

A wok is a tool. A rice cooker is also a tool. You see where I'm getting?

Well, if you want to motivate people even more to not buy self-driving cars, sure.

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@gugigor

I'm libertarian on this issue.