California has new rules that govern the testing of self-driving cars on public roads.
The rules, approved on May 19 by state attorneys, require a human to be in the driver’s seat when a computer takes control during testing. They’re a response to a 2012 law that will allow personal use of self-driving cars in the future.
Google and other companies already have sent computer-driven cars hundreds of thousands of miles in California. The regulations, which take effect Sept. 16, also cover insurance, licensing and other issues.
They’re an attempt to catch up with technology that could be commercially available by decade’s end. Currently driverless cars are a gray area of the law.
Topics California Auto Personal Auto
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
After Years of Pushing Rate Hikes, Florida’s Citizens Now Wants HO Rate Decrease
Chubb, The Hartford, Liberty and Travelers Team Up on Surety Tech Launch
Truckers Who Fail English Tests Are Pulled Off Roads in Crackdown
State Insurance Legislators ‘Greatly Disturbed’ by Trump AI Regulation Order 


