If self-driving cars were remotely possible, it would be obvious, because Google Maps would be insanely perfect. That's the bottom line as far as I'm concerned. Every time it directs me to do something stupid, I think, what if it were telling my car directly?
I'm sure the situation will improve eventually, but I'm guessing we're still several decades away and that it'll take advances in both sensor technology and software before driverless cars work at the same level as a human driver in all conditions. In perfect weather, on perfect roads, with minimal traffic and zero surprises the tech works mostly OK now, but those are basically lab conditions and not the reality most of us drive in today.
I would want better reliability than "it shouldn't be a problem...until it is." That's pretty much the same reason my 82yo mom used and let me be the first to say you don't want to be driving next to her car (she doesn't drive anymore).
As a preliminary step to any regulatory approval Tesla should release every byte of data from their tests so we can analyze the scenarios and events that the software has dealt with, so we can second-guess them. I seem to remember a common criticism of Tesla is that it's kinda shitty to work there and I don't think the best work comes out of an environment like that.
We should know for sure what they/you mean by "seem to" and "very low." Trade secret protection is insignificant when public safety is involved.
Along the same lines, if they can figure out how to drive a car, they can figure out how to give instructions to human drivers that are far, far better than the state of the art. So, when they release their revolutionary navigation system, I'll try it. Not buying a car from them though.
We trust human vision for this purpose; is there anything human vision is doing that would be impossible to emulate with a computer, given enough research and development?
You're the one who used the word "enough" in "ever be good enough to solve the problem." What did you mean by it? Are you claiming that human perception cannot ever be synthetically matched?