Re: Too many paid too much
TCI might think there's no future in autonomous vehicles but, in that case, I suggest they don't fly in any modern aircraft. Autonomous cars are not easy but significant progress has been made in the last decade.
I don't think there is any real future in autonomous vehicles. The pinnacle of their usefulness should be lane keeping cruise control on a motorway and anything else should be banned until it actually works.
Aircraft are a whole different kettle of fish. Aircraft fly in straight lines in the sky where (assuming you select an appropriate altitude above ground allowing for mountains etc) on a flight path clear of other aircraft then it's effectively impossible to hit anything on a practical level. And if an aircraft on autopilot does depart the designated flightpath then an irate air traffic controller will ask the aircraft to fly the right path, or get everybody else to move around it while writing the pilot up for losing their license.
Put it this way; How many aviation autopilot errors result in deaths that weren't as a result of human error (eg programming the aircraft to to fly from A to B at 10,000ft without realising that there was an 11,000 ft mountain between A & B).
Autonomous cars are not easy but significant progress has been made in the last decade.
Which is good. But the "significant progress" should be made in a lab, and in controlled tests on designated testing grounds.
They shouldn't really have an attitude that says "that works some of the time; let's deploy it live to cars on the road". I know that I might get killed by a human driver who's either incompetent, or just having a bad day. It's unlikely, because they usually manage to take themselves out by ramming trees etc. They generally receive a summary punishment via the laws of physics, and if they survive then occasionally by the law of the land and most human drivers accept that result.
The people deploying unsafe "self driving cars" that have performances below that expected of a learner driver (Tesla's ramming stationary police/fire vehicles in a road complete with sirens and flashing lights; we're looking at you) appear to get away with this with zero consequences, and then blame the driver for the accident. Unsurprisingly, this does impact on the willingness of meatbags at risk of being mown down by them somewhat to share the public roads that we pay for out of our taxes with them.
Especially since if driverless vehicles actually worked then they would be a benefit for the richest 1% of society who already skip their obligations to pay tax required to maintain infrastructure, and they would like to avoid paying their drivers too via automation, imposing yet more misery on the bottom paid workers acting as taxi drivers, delivery drivers etc.