Google's venture capital arm, Google Ventures, invested $258 million in Uber in August 2013. Now the companies could become competitors. Google is preparing to offer its own ride service
using its driverless cars, per one report. David Drummond, Google's chief legal officer and senior vice president of corporate development, has informed Uber's board that this might happen, according
to a person close to the Uber board, reports Bloomberg.
The data
signals that autonomous cars will send and receive, and information each collects, will become common-- identifying everything from speed, turns, locations and obstacles to roadside stores, and signs.
While the data could be used to refine and monitor the technology, future cross-channel marketing strategies could easily pull in that data, and even make it anonymous per location.
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Evidently
the U.S. Department of Transportation believes autonomous cars are in the future for Americans. A new study
by the DoT -- Beyond Traffic 2045 -- describes a possible road map for the future of transportation in the U.S. -- not just for
cars, but all modes of transportation.
The paper points out that the U.S. population will likely grow by 70 million -- up to 390 million by 2045. Some 75% of the population will live in places
that will create Los Angeles-type traffic congestion in places like Omaha.
The paper describes ways to resolve future challenges through technology, connected vehicles, automated
transportation, and trends that will shape the economics of transportation and freight movement through 2045.
The study also discusses the impact of change, higher temperatures due to more
congestion, severe weather and rising sea levels.
"Many expect a tiered roll-out of vehicles as driving functions are increasingly automated over the next decade. Vehicles that can apply
emergency braking or keep a driver in their lane are available now," per the study. "Automated driving on limited-access highways could be an option on luxury vehicles in several years. Full
automation, where a driver no longer has to steer or adjust speed, could be commercially available within the next 20 years."