U.S. House of Representatives passed SELF DRIVE Act that allows thousands of autonomous cars on roads, now awaits approval from Senate

Briefing

U.S. House of Representatives passed SELF DRIVE Act that allows thousands of autonomous cars on roads, now awaits approval from Senate

January 19, 2018

Briefing

  • SELF DRIVE Act – U.S. House of Representatives passed SELF DRIVE (Safely Ensuring Lives Future Deployment and Research In Vehicle Evolution) Act, new bill that will pave way for more driverless cars on roads, with bipartisan support on September 2017
  • National Framework – National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to set common framework that will guide vehicle design, construction, and performance, bypassing 21 different state laws governing autonomous vehicles, while states maintain authority over vehicle registration and licensing
  • Privacy-Enabled – Will require companies to submit privacy plans citing how data is collected, used, and stored; how customers are informed about their data; and what customers can do if they refuse to share data
  • More Exemptions – Will allow each company to deploy 25,000 self-driving cars in first year of implementation, reaching 100,000 in three-year period
  • Stuck in Senate – Bill still in Senate as of January 2018, with Democrat senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), and Edward Markey (D-MA) doubting readiness of autonomous vehicles and susceptibility to cyber attacks

Accelerator

Market Disruption

Sector

Government (excluding military), Information Technology, Transportation and Logistics

Organization

U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration, U.S. Senate

Source

Original Publication Date

January 18, 2018

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