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GM's Cruise has had the most self-driving crashes in California — here's how the autonomous rivals stack up when it comes to safety

As Fogden says, most of the crashes have occurred in Silicon Valley and San Francisco. You can see the clusters below. Keep scrolling to see how the competitors rank in terms of crash percentages.
As Fogden says, most of the crashes have occurred in Silicon Valley and San Francisco. You can see the clusters below. Keep scrolling to see how the competitors rank in terms of crash percentages.

Self-driving cars will be safer than our current roads, experts say. But until we get to full autonomy, there have been — and will likely continue to be — some speed bumps.

Because the technology is so new, self-driving car accidents tend to get a lot of attention. Cruise's 52 crashes, for example, pale in comparison to the 3,564 traffic deaths in California last year alone.Still, the incidents are top of mind for other drivers on the road — as well as for competing companies, which have a knack for secrecy.

Tech news and review site Tech.co combed through the California Department of Motor Vehicle data to quantify and locate each individual self-driving car crash in the state, including which company's vehicles were involved.

"There’s no progress without pain," Tom Fogden, who lead the research for Tech.co , said. "Our research shows that Californians, especially those in San Francisco are bearing the brunt of the change to self-driving vehicles, hopefully, it will all be worth it."

It's important to consider miles traveled when evaluating the findings. Waymo, for example, has now logged more than 10 million miles of self-driving tests — well above that of any competitors. Tech.co 's data does not include crash rates per miles driven, only per vehicles in the fleet, an important distinction.

Cruise, by comparison, had only logged about 131,000 miles on California roads between December 2016 and 2017, according to its most recent state filing. In that same time period, Waymo logged 350,000, Ars Technica reported .

Waymo declined to comment, while Cruise did not respond to a request from Business Insider.

In some cases, it was a human driver at fault for a collision — including times when the computer would have made a safer decision.

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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SEE ALSO: A Waymo self-driving car sent a motorcyclist to the hospital — but the human driver was at fault

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