this post was submitted on 13 Feb 2026
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But they built in a saw blade killswitch if a finger is detected a good decade ago or more. Surely they can apply such technology to cars.
The sawstop causes mechanical damage that must be repaired if activated. It's more like an airbag than an e-stop.
It hasn't yet been used without people around who can stop the process if it goes wrong.
And yet things like robovaccums have. The sawblade has to detect the right material. Meanwhile Robot vaccums just have to detect anything in its path to then stop. And it has a bumper. And ring cameras can detect motion. As well as dashboard cameras. Dont see why any of this technology cannot be used in car doors just to detect anything in it’s path.
I'm not saying it's forever impossible, I'm saying I currently don't trust these technologies to operate autonomously in a context where lives are at potential risk and they'll need to prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that they can do so reliably before I start trusting.