Categories: Technology

Google receives patent for driver-less delivery vehicles

Google’s “autonomous delivery platform” is approved by the US patent office allowing for the legal use of driver-less automobiles.

Google’s patent extract has all the bells and whistles pointing towards a driver-less truck delivery platform.

The intended purpose of the autonomous delivery platform is being described as a method in which “an autonomous road vehicle is operative to receive destination information, and to drive to a destination based on the destination information.”

The patent details diagrams (see image below) in which the trucks are loaded with compartmental lockers with specific PINs that the recipients would use to access their packages.

“In some embodiments, the compartment access information is a personal identification number (PIN), and the access subsystem includes a PIN pad for receiving a PIN as a component of the compartment access information,” the patent states.

Google had previously written the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) asking for a clearer interpretation surrounding several legal definitions, among which, whether a self-driving vehicle needs to have “the occupant of a motor vehicle seated immediately behind the steering control system.”

With new innovative technology comes new innovative ways to interpret the law.

Interestingly, Google actually proposed how the regulations should be interpreted, ranging from rendering the occupant of a motor vehicle meaningless in their case, to considering the entire vehicle as the operator.

In any case, the NHTSA was in agreement with most all of Google’s interpretations, and Google’s Self-Driving System (SDS) was given the same definitive characteristics as a human driver.

Most comments from the NHTSA over several safety points stated, “We agree that the SDS is the driver” for purposes of this or that phrase, paragraph, or definition relating to each safety issue.

What does this mean for the future of driver-less delivery vehicles?

With Amazon taking to the skies with drone delivery services, it seems that Google has its feet firmly grounded to take on the land-haul, potentially making human truck drivers, with their annoying habits of sleeping and taking pee breaks, obsolete.

PATENT DIAGRAM OF PIN SYSTEM

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

Recent Posts

Helogen’s HEL-IOS to turn Starlab into autonomous biomanufacturing hub in orbit 

As the space industry continues to expand, driving technological progress, economic growth and strategic advances,…

2 days ago

Macron, Sunak praise India’s digital identity, health ID schemes: India AI Impact Summit

French President Emmanuel Macron and former British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak praise India for its…

3 days ago

Voice is the next digital ID interface: India AI Impact Summit

Voice is the next digital ID interface for biometric liveness verification, following facial recognition, fingerprinting,…

3 days ago

Nairobi to Host Africa’s First Digital Asset Summit Inspired by Pope Leo’s Dilexi Te

A new paradigm of finance is being introduced to Africa. The Africa Digital Assets Summit…

3 days ago

Sudip Singh named CEO at Ness Digital Engineering to help more enterprises succeed in the AI economy 

A new global survey that featured 1,800 C-level executives found that data and AI dominates…

4 days ago

ADvendio helps reclaim 28% of the workday with the launch of Revenue OS for Agentic Advertising

While it seems that no industry is immune to the disruptive forces of AI technology,…

5 days ago