Another Driver Chooses To Believe GPS Over The Reality Of A Cliff
from the the-machines-are-taking-over dept
Ah, yet another tale of a British driver turning on his GPS unit and turning off his brain: a guy in Yorkshire left his car teetering over the edge of a cliff after blindly following his GPS down a narrow, steep path. The GPS said it was a road, and the driver seems to have let that override his common sense, as plenty of people are wont to do. Drivers often like to blame the technology for taking them down some treacherous path, but it's not as if the device simply suggested a suboptimal route, or drove the car itself. The infallibility some people see in technology is troubling, since they seem to see things like GPS units as perfectly acceptable replacements for their brains.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Trust
So the problem is to work out at what point to stop trusting your trusted expert and say no, this is really not the right road. This is more difficult in the UK than the US because the British road system has had a longer time to develop into a hideous writhing mess. The signifiers for "not really a road" are not as clear.
This trust that people put in technology is a side effect of one of the basic psychological abilities that allows human civilization to exist in the first place.
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Two words...
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Mapquest
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I have seen times I would do this
Hoever I have been in situations following GPS or even directions from google that say to turn down a certain road. When I get there the road is barely a road at all, though it is marked. I decided not to turn down it. Maybe it was the right way one time, but it looked like it was doom now.
Honestly I'd hold the county responsible for leaving a road headed for a cliff without a bunch of warning signs.
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Re:
This isn't the case in the UK, whose roads both inside and outside of urban areas usually follow ancient tracks. So, there's a lot more places to get lost, a lot more blind corners, maze-like one way systems, etc. In other words, it's the most likely place for both GPS systems to get confused and for English language press to report incidents...
Of course, anyone who believes a GPS unit over and above what they see in front of their own eyes deserves whatever they get.
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Does not compute. Error! Error!
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Re: Trust
I have an easy solution. Look out your windshield. Problem solved.
"The signifiers for "not really a road" are not as clear."
How much more clear could a cliff be? I've read stories from the UK about people driving off of bridges that were out and situations where they drove into lakes. A large section of missing bridge is also not a clear signifier?! A lake is also not a clear signifier?!
Once again, simply looking out that big window in the front of the car would have alleviated those problems. You see a cliff. You stop. You see a portion of the bridge missing You stop. You see a lake. You stop.
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Technology is the blame for all of life's problems
Damn, technology doesn't always work though. Last time I did that, I ended up in a pool in some yokel's backyard, with 3 kids stuck in my grill and windshield.
Sure my blood alcohol level was 15 times over the legal limit, but I say the satellites and the interweb are to blame.
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Re: Trust
"Mr Jones, from Doncaster, South Yorkshire, only stopped when his BMW hit a fence above Gauxholme railway bridge on Sunday morning."
Fences do not suddenly appear. Either this man was navigating his car solely by GPS in some sort of bizzare attempt to create a real life video game, or he chose to believe that the fence wasn't real because the satnav said it wasn't.
I can understand how people can get lost following a GPS, turn down a dirt road, end up in a dead end or end up on some guys private property (a farm or whatever). I can see how you'd assume that the satnav knows a shortcut or something.
But people turning down one-way streets, off a cliff, onto bridges that are under repair or don't even exist any more... those people are just stupid, it's nothing to do with trust or satnavs, they're just stupid people who seem to be following the satnav without actually looking out of their windows.
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Re: I have seen times I would do this
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This may be the reason I don't trust the GPS.
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Liabile
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Maybe...
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I wonder...
Sure would make a comical situation even more so.
People are stupid.
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Re: Technology is the blame for all of life's problems
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Re: Mapquest
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Re: Re: I have seen times I would do this
And yet a brit nearly drove off of it!
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Re: Re: Mapquest
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Re: Re: Trust
Looking at the photo at the bottom of the article, it appears the fence would have been out of the driver's line of sight until the last moment. If the ground was rising toward the edge of the cliff, it could easily have looked like the path was just disappearing over the top of an innocuous hill. (Of course it would help to see an actual photo of what it looked like from the driver's perspective.)
If you and other drivers you know are in the habit of stopping every time you approach the crest of a hill or a blind curve, just in case a fence has appeared there, then I will accept my argument has been negated.
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Survival of the non-idiots.
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Re:
And when the GPS tells him to run over WH, he will do it !
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Re: Re: Re: Mapquest
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Re: Mapquest
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physics vs gadgets
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Re: Re: Trust
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Re: physics vs gadgets
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