The part that bothers me most is that they never seemed to care about this while he worked there, why are we hearing about it so long after the fact? Given the unnamed Google sources being quoted, they would appear to be the source for much of this story. This quote seems to sum it up for me:
“He was that kind of guy,” the co-worker said. “You know, an asshole. But a really gifted one. Our asshole, I guess.”
My take is they tried to drag him through the dirt in the press to increase the lawsuit chances of success but now it’s coming back to bite them since it was basically Larry and other execs who were enabling him. Maybe it’s just some random news cycle thing or maybe someone’s bidding (know any companies going for ipo that would benefit?) - hard to tell
How are sociopathic tendencies of higher echelons of corporate management news to anyone? The only “newsworthy” part of it is it relates to google (which isn’t really news to anyone who’s been on the inside). If it was abouy some finance firm nobody would bat an eye
It’s not news in general but many people liked to pretend it wasn’t true of Silicon Valley or at least favorite companies like Google: sure, there are sharks in most places but we’re a strict meritocracy where only results matter!
That’s been cracking over time as e.g. people noticed that all of the cool stuff Google does is a sideline for selling ads, Uber is a gypsy cab company which would fail the instant they had to comply with the law or pay for externalities, etc. Rather than letting SV redesign the world we’re hope the world will rein it in enough before more people are hurt.
Given how strong that self-image has been in tech culture for decades, a lot of people are going to have strong emotions when it’s no longer possible to maintain cognitive dissonance.
> One juror, clearly a gamer, whispered to his neighbor and, as if holding a controller, mimed the start of a classic Nintendo cheat code: “up,” “up,” “down,” “down.”
This isn't the entire code, and it's normally referred to as the "Konami code" since it appears across platforms in Konami games.
Delusional. Almost all of SV’s major success stories are grade A psychopaths. Simply how the game works. The rare cases that are benevolent usually get coopted by their more devious counterparts and VCs. (See Google, Twitter, eg.)
You and I clearly have a different idea of what silicon valley's "major success stories" are.
Some non-psychopathic successful individuals: Bill Hewlett, David Packard, Gordon Moore, Andy Grove, Federico Faggin, Ross Freeman, Bob Noyce, the Varian brothers, Bob Taylor, Jerry Sanders, Wilfred Corrigan ...
It's only in the last 25 years that movie villains have become the norm.
Fair enough I’m not familiar with that much older generation. But I think you’re off the mark, it’s more like 35-40 years. The notoriety of the Jobs, Gates, Ellison, and onwards era dwarfs the old school, so I think my charactization is accurate. And I doubt those old school guys were any less ruthless, it’s just how the game works.
I would also highly recommend that you become familiar with these "much older generations" before generalizing about Silicon Valley's success stories. It's called "silicon" for a reason, and being unfamiliar with these individuals is pretty disqualifying in terms of being able to say anything about the area and its history.
If someone has access to the source code, there isn't much that can be done for prevention. I suppose reactive measures, such as attaching a hidden GPS tracker like the ones in expensive rental cars, could detect violations.
Structure as appropriate for the potential for public harm. If necessary, make it required that an executive sign. If you can’t trust your executives then you shouldn’t have projects that can harm the public. They could have killed the Camry driver.
One of Waymo's alleged trade secrets was that they used a fiber laser. This is well known LIDAR technology.
They also apparently think diode alingment pins are a trade secret.
In the trial they also made it seem like Waymo invented the concept of monostatic LIDAR.
My guess as to what happened is that Waymo has nothing solid on Levandowski but he acted extremely supiciously and they hoped to find anything he had stolen in the process of the lawsuitl
Legitimate means whatever I want it to mean - that's why I like it. In this case, I used it to mean something like "profitable, with a business model that doesn't depend on monopoly, selling a product that isn't smoke and mirrors."
I wonder how much Sebastian Thrun was involved during this time frame. Isn't he also a key player behind Google self-driving car project? I don't even remember whether he was on the witness stand during the trial between Google and Uber.
This is so true. The old adage is to under promise and over deliver... but really, if you do over promise and under deliver, things can still work out if you sell it well enough
This is like saying we want drunk drivers off the street. Call your congressman/woman have them work and pass a bill to hand harsh fines for texting while driving. This is not even technologically complicated, as your cellphone knows when you drive and unless emergency should not let you text. Pushing an unproven and insecure technology that doesn't differentiate a plastic bag swirling on the wind from baby that happen to feel out on to the street, is like trying to fix tooth cavity with a blow torch.
This is not even remotely like drunk driving, at all. Do you see pretty every adult in the US walking around with a bottle of whiskey in their pocket? Didn’t think so. You could also argue that we could fix drunk driving by installing breathalyzers in every steering wheel and requiring a passing test before being able to drive. Good luck with that.
There have been several proposals to install breathalyzers in cars. Had the public education and law enforcement campaign (MADD etc) failed to improve the situation these might well have been the next step.
Dear USERNAME, I just noticed we are moving in fast pace; per SAFEDRIVENOTTEXT Act, please state that you are a driver or passenger.
[_] Driver [_] Passenger [_] Not in a moving vehicle
Please be advised that per SAFEDRIVERNOTTEXT Act, it is first class misdemeanor to provide untruthful answer, and your driving privilege and/or insurance coverage can be impacted if your statement is untrue.
Is anybody naive enough to think that these companies would give up on creating self-driving cars if they were not able to patent some of their technology? I don't think you can really even make the argument that patents, in this case, encourage innovation (across the industry - they do incentivize grabbing potentially useful patents as fast as possible for individual companies), nor that they benefit consumers.
That was 7 years ago. 7 years before that video ipods just came out, blogging became a thing, and the best phone out was a razor. That was a whole technological epoc ago.
There are, for the self-driving car program in question which developed over that 7 years of progres? Can you name a similar incident in the past year of a Waymo car boxing in another car on a highway and sending people to the hospital?
No, it doesn't, because their program sucked from the start, worse than most, and even if they were the best self-driving car program, Uber's has only been around for a few years and so is not a valid counterexample to the claim '7 years won't make a difference'. It sure does seem to've for Waymo.
Ah yeah just so you know there is a lot more to building a self driving car system than the general knowledge held in the head of the lead engineer. It is unlikely that he would have known even a tenth of the systems involved in the waymo program at a level of detail required to quickly replicate them.
It took 7 years for this particular incident to come to light. Until I learned about it, I thought that Google/Waymo was pretty good about disclosures, but now I have to wonder what present-day incidents we will only be finding out about 7 years from now.
And several people died in human-caused wrecks while you were typing that sentence. Nobody seems too hung up on that. Not scary enough, I guess, and you can't blame one or two large monolithic corporations for it.
Self-driving cars are one of those instances where painstaking adherence to the precautionary principle is going to get a lot of people killed due to poor risk modeling. This article is a great example, where the reporter has engaged in elaborate rhetorical gymnastics to paint an incident arising from a human driver's poor judgement as the fault of a "rogue engineer."
There's no evidence thus far that self-driving cars will improve road safety. None whatsoever. For the interested, here is an excellent overview of the quality of evidence necessary to prove same: https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/...
Agreed, that looks like an interesting report and I'll definitely spend some time with it.
However, the whole idea behind the report is that the reason we don't have the necessary evidence to draw a conclusion is that the cars simply haven't been on the road long enough yet. It accomplishes nothing to pound your desk and proclaim loftily that "There's no evidence whatsoever."
I don't see why AVs can't outperform human drivers, and further, I don't see why they need to be built with NASA-level software and hardware quality to meet that goal, as many suggest. That will only increase costs and delay benefits. "Move fast and break things" is a perfectly valid strategy if it results in fatality numbers that spike temporarily and then plunge rapidly, which is what I personally suspect is going to happen.
> And several people died in human-caused wrecks while you were typing that sentence.
According to [0] 1.24 million people die in automobile related accidents annually. This works out to 0.04 per second. Unless parent is a very slow typist your number overstates the real toll several times.
I would wager you simply can't. Levandowski was spearheading the self-driving effort at Google.
He was guiding strategy and everything. When a senior employee misbehave it's hard to fire them. When they have a strategic value, it's almost impossible unless they are already lost i.e actively work against the companies interests to further their or a competitor's interests.
Buried at the bottom, Levandowski's controversial world wisdom -
"The only thing that matters is the future,” [Levandowski] told me after the civil trial was settled. “I don’t even know why we study history. It’s entertaining, I guess—the dinosaurs and the Neanderthals and the Industrial Revolution, and stuff like that. But what already happened doesn’t really matter. You don’t need to know that history to build on what they made. In technology, all that matters is tomorrow."
To what extent does this attitude represent Silicon Valley? More usefully, could we avoid some ill-bred start-up ideas and venture capital wasted if the attitude of Silicon Valley was changed to include just a little more care about history?
But occasionally with unpredictable results, which topples incumbent corporations who refuse to innovate or reduce costs, which is why startups succeed. In that respect maybe the startup's attitude isn't so bad.
That is very sad. I can only hope that Levandowski someday stumbles upon James Burke’s documentary series Connections and gains an appreciation for how science and technology can develop in unpredictable ways far beyond the expectations or aims of the creators.
A hundred years from now I bet history professors will bring up Levandowski as “one of those Silicon Valley jackasses who thought they were building the future but had no idea how they arrived at the present.”
Levandowski's sentament seems extraordinarily ignorant. I immediately thought of the "you should skate where the puck is going" quote which, I think, implies the importance of having information about the history of the puck and how the puck behaves, while acknowledging that the future is the goal. Obviously you want to end up in the future, where the puck is, but it is well-nigh impossible to get there unless you have good information about the past.
I can't remember if there's a specific term for it, but I believe HN has some way of giving a story a "second chance", which must have been used here and seems to involve resetting the timestamps.
> So basically, according to The Newyorker, a Google self-driving car was at least partially at fault for a hit-and-run causing serious injury and property damage.
That's pretty hyperbolic and loose with the facts.
You can't call it a hit and run, because Google's car did not hit the other vehicle.
You cannot say that Google was at fault for the incident because they had the right of way. While slowing down to let the other car merge would have been safer for everybody, it is on the merging vehicle to ensure they have space to merge safely and to safely respond if vehicles in the lane they are trying to forcibly merge into doesn't make space for them.
There is certainly a point to be made about what type of incidents are being reported. Incidents like this, where the self driving car behaves unexpectedly but legally are important information as we try to create the regulatory framework for self-driving vehicles.
> You cannot say that Google was at fault for the incident because they had the right of way.
It is interesting to note that the concept of "right of way" has been removed from various jurisdictions in Australia. We now have many "give way" rules. Basically, if someone is supposed to give way to you and you could have prevented an accident and didn't then you are considered proportionally at fault with the other person.
Not that many people take notice, but you are supposed to drive defensively here and work to avoid accidents. The only ones who have any sort of "right of way" are emergency service vehicles like ambulance, fire and police.
One thing I encourage the young people I know is to take up the various "defensive" driving courses that are available.
> According to people with knowledge of events that day, the Prius accidentally boxed in another vehicle, a Camry. A human driver could easily have handled the situation by slowing down and letting the Camry merge into traffic
Shouldn't the Prius continue at a constant speed? And its the merging cars job to adjust speed the get in?
I personally find a frustration when merging onto a freeway is where a driver in the main lane slows down for you but 'just enough' so your not sure if they are slowing down or not so you slow down to get behind them so they slow down more.... just keep your speed constant and the merging car will adjust things.
> The Prius regained control and turned a corner on the freeway, leaving the Camry behind. Levandowski and Taylor didn’t know how badly damaged the Camry was. They didn’t go back to check on the other driver or to see if anyone else had been hurt. Neither they nor other Google executives made inquiries with the authorities. The police were not informed that a self-driving algorithm had contributed to the accident.
> Levandowski, rather than being cowed by the incident, later defended it as an invaluable source of data, an opportunity to learn how to avoid similar mistakes. He sent colleagues an e-mail with video of the near-collision. Its subject line was “Prius vs. Camry.”
Holy shit. Why aren't there criminal charges here?
93 comments
[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 116 ms ] thread[1] https://arstechnica.com/cars/2018/10/lone-engineer-spanks-wa...
“He was that kind of guy,” the co-worker said. “You know, an asshole. But a really gifted one. Our asshole, I guess.”
That’s been cracking over time as e.g. people noticed that all of the cool stuff Google does is a sideline for selling ads, Uber is a gypsy cab company which would fail the instant they had to comply with the law or pay for externalities, etc. Rather than letting SV redesign the world we’re hope the world will rein it in enough before more people are hurt.
Given how strong that self-image has been in tech culture for decades, a lot of people are going to have strong emotions when it’s no longer possible to maintain cognitive dissonance.
This isn't the entire code, and it's normally referred to as the "Konami code" since it appears across platforms in Konami games.
Some non-psychopathic successful individuals: Bill Hewlett, David Packard, Gordon Moore, Andy Grove, Federico Faggin, Ross Freeman, Bob Noyce, the Varian brothers, Bob Taylor, Jerry Sanders, Wilfred Corrigan ...
It's only in the last 25 years that movie villains have become the norm.
Compare these guys to Page, Zuckerberg, Musk, Kalanick, Thiel, Kurzweil, ... and all of a sudden they seem very normal.
Also, removing him from the the tech lead position would have helped prevent further incidents.
Then something else should. Imagine one guy, gone nuts, changing the code on millions of vehicles in one shot.
They also apparently think diode alingment pins are a trade secret.
In the trial they also made it seem like Waymo invented the concept of monostatic LIDAR.
My guess as to what happened is that Waymo has nothing solid on Levandowski but he acted extremely supiciously and they hoped to find anything he had stolen in the process of the lawsuitl
Hahahha. No.
The days of Noyce's Intel and so on are long gone. Only nvidia really remains innovative
I'm going to take a wild guess and say you work in the semi industry? ;)
Intel, the shining example, definitely relies on the x86 monopoly
I feel this is more a human nature problem than a "tech os evil" problem.
Every company seems to have one. They always intrigue me.
How would the phone know if you sit in the left, right or the backseat? Would you propose preventing phone use for every car passenger as well?
[_] Driver [_] Passenger [_] Not in a moving vehicle
Please be advised that per SAFEDRIVERNOTTEXT Act, it is first class misdemeanor to provide untruthful answer, and your driving privilege and/or insurance coverage can be impacted if your statement is untrue.
Texting while driving is what causes majority of crashes involving cellphones, clicking a button is statistical noise.
Self-driving cars are one of those instances where painstaking adherence to the precautionary principle is going to get a lot of people killed due to poor risk modeling. This article is a great example, where the reporter has engaged in elaborate rhetorical gymnastics to paint an incident arising from a human driver's poor judgement as the fault of a "rogue engineer."
I don't think that's true. A lot of people campaign for better road safety.
However, the whole idea behind the report is that the reason we don't have the necessary evidence to draw a conclusion is that the cars simply haven't been on the road long enough yet. It accomplishes nothing to pound your desk and proclaim loftily that "There's no evidence whatsoever."
I don't see why AVs can't outperform human drivers, and further, I don't see why they need to be built with NASA-level software and hardware quality to meet that goal, as many suggest. That will only increase costs and delay benefits. "Move fast and break things" is a perfectly valid strategy if it results in fatality numbers that spike temporarily and then plunge rapidly, which is what I personally suspect is going to happen.
According to [0] 1.24 million people die in automobile related accidents annually. This works out to 0.04 per second. Unless parent is a very slow typist your number overstates the real toll several times.
[0] http://www.progressive-economy.org/trade_facts/traffic-accid...
Seems to be a mix of 2010 and 2014 data, but broadly speaking close enough.
We need to learn to place reasonable restrictions on the use of potentially dangerous technology while it’s under nascent development.
I have no idea what that would look like, or if it’s possible. I do believe it’s an on going concern.
Edit: changed active to nacent to improve clarity.
He was guiding strategy and everything. When a senior employee misbehave it's hard to fire them. When they have a strategic value, it's almost impossible unless they are already lost i.e actively work against the companies interests to further their or a competitor's interests.
"The only thing that matters is the future,” [Levandowski] told me after the civil trial was settled. “I don’t even know why we study history. It’s entertaining, I guess—the dinosaurs and the Neanderthals and the Industrial Revolution, and stuff like that. But what already happened doesn’t really matter. You don’t need to know that history to build on what they made. In technology, all that matters is tomorrow."
To what extent does this attitude represent Silicon Valley? More usefully, could we avoid some ill-bred start-up ideas and venture capital wasted if the attitude of Silicon Valley was changed to include just a little more care about history?
A hundred years from now I bet history professors will bring up Levandowski as “one of those Silicon Valley jackasses who thought they were building the future but had no idea how they arrived at the present.”
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Ca1CO6...
Does hackernews move posts around and change their timestamps?
I don't know if this link will continue working, but if you look at it through this view, the comment that you're replying to shows as "2 days ago": https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=oldgradstudent&next=...
But if you link to it directly, it shows as (currently) "4 hours ago": https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18223066
I can understand the second-chance idea, but lying about when comments were posted is very strange.
I'd be curious to see the video; it sounds like the other driver could have easily adjusted to the Google car by braking and merging in behind it.
That's pretty hyperbolic and loose with the facts.
You can't call it a hit and run, because Google's car did not hit the other vehicle.
You cannot say that Google was at fault for the incident because they had the right of way. While slowing down to let the other car merge would have been safer for everybody, it is on the merging vehicle to ensure they have space to merge safely and to safely respond if vehicles in the lane they are trying to forcibly merge into doesn't make space for them.
There is certainly a point to be made about what type of incidents are being reported. Incidents like this, where the self driving car behaves unexpectedly but legally are important information as we try to create the regulatory framework for self-driving vehicles.
It is interesting to note that the concept of "right of way" has been removed from various jurisdictions in Australia. We now have many "give way" rules. Basically, if someone is supposed to give way to you and you could have prevented an accident and didn't then you are considered proportionally at fault with the other person.
Not that many people take notice, but you are supposed to drive defensively here and work to avoid accidents. The only ones who have any sort of "right of way" are emergency service vehicles like ambulance, fire and police.
One thing I encourage the young people I know is to take up the various "defensive" driving courses that are available.
Shouldn't the Prius continue at a constant speed? And its the merging cars job to adjust speed the get in?
I personally find a frustration when merging onto a freeway is where a driver in the main lane slows down for you but 'just enough' so your not sure if they are slowing down or not so you slow down to get behind them so they slow down more.... just keep your speed constant and the merging car will adjust things.
It is better to cause a slight confusion but be prepared. This is why people are slowing down when they see a car merging. To brake and to maneuver.
> The Prius regained control and turned a corner on the freeway, leaving the Camry behind. Levandowski and Taylor didn’t know how badly damaged the Camry was. They didn’t go back to check on the other driver or to see if anyone else had been hurt. Neither they nor other Google executives made inquiries with the authorities. The police were not informed that a self-driving algorithm had contributed to the accident.
> Levandowski, rather than being cowed by the incident, later defended it as an invaluable source of data, an opportunity to learn how to avoid similar mistakes. He sent colleagues an e-mail with video of the near-collision. Its subject line was “Prius vs. Camry.”
Holy shit. Why aren't there criminal charges here?