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Tesla Robotaxis Are Crashing More Than 12 Times as Frequently as Human Drivers
(www.commondreams.org)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
It isn't a unique Texas Law. It's law everywhere in the US and Canada.
"mostly all in North America, require all surrounding vehicles to stop when a school bus is stopped with its red lights flashing."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus_traffic_stop_laws
Only if you are from a different country.
Which is beside the point that if anyone else drove through 20 bus stops, they couldn't use the excuse, "I'm from another country so I don't know your laws." to get out of jail.
That it's a software fix is also beside the point. "Oh I drove illegally 20 times. I know better and won't do it again."
The default in most other states is that opposite direction traffic on a divided highway don't have to stop. The states differ in what constitutes a divided highway, but generally at least 5 feet of space or a physical barrier between the lanes would qualify. In Texas, however, there is no exception for divided highways, and the key definition is "controlled-access highway," which requires on/off ramps and physical barriers between traffic directions, or "different roadways,"
So for a 5-lane road where there are 2 lanes going in each direction with a center lane for left turns, Texas requires opposite direction traffic to stop, while most other states do not.
Yeah, a lot of school bus stops on five lane highways… /s
2 lanes in each direction with a middle lane? That's a big chunk of Texas, especially when weighted for population.