Toronto Star

Ford makes a patent applicatio­n for driverless police cars

Motor company’s submission ‘a normal course of business’

- PETER HOLLEY THE WASHINGTON POST

Imagine a police car that issues tickets without even pulling you over.

What if the same car could use artificial intelligen­ce to find good hiding spots to catch traffic violators and identify drivers by scanning licence plates, tapping into surveillan­ce cameras and wirelessly accessing government records?

What if the prospect of a police officer tapping on your car window, asking for your licence and registrati­on, became a relic of transporta­tion’s past?

The details may sound far-fetched, as if they belong in the science-fiction action flick Demolition Man or a new dystopian novel inspired by Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, but these scenarios are grounded in a potential reality. They come from a patent developed by Ford that is being reviewed by the U.S. government to create autonomous police cars. Ford’s patent applicatio­n was published this month.

Although experts claim autonomous vehicles will make driving safer and more rule-bound, Ford argues in its applicatio­n that in the future, traffic violations will never disappear entirely.

“While autonomous vehicles can and will be programmed to obey traffic laws, a human driver can override that programmin­g to control and operate the vehicle at any time,” the patent’s applicatio­n says. “When a vehicle is under the control of a human driver there is a possibilit­y of violation of traffic laws. Thus, there will still be a need to police traffic.”

The patent applicatio­n says that autonomous police vehicles don’t necessaril­y replace the need for human police officers for catching traffic scofflaws. Some “routine tasks,” such as issuing tickets for failure to stop at a stop sign, can be automated, the patent says, but other tasks that can’t be automated will be left to people.

The applicatio­n, filed in July 2016, includes elaborate diagrams depicting the autonomous police car interactin­g with its environmen­t. It says officers could be inside the vehicle at all times and reclaim control of the car when necessary.

But the applicatio­n also shows how an autonomous police vehicle could be able to carry out many tasks we associate with human officers.

In one scenario, a surveillan­ce camera or roadside sensor documents a speeding vehicle. A signal is relayed through a “central computing system” to the autonomous police vehicle, which is tasked with pursuing the vehicle, tracking its location and cap- turing video that can be used to analyze the fleeing vehicle’s movement.

In another, the police vehicle analyzes traffic patterns using machine learning — a type of artificial intelligen­ce that gives computers the ability to learn without being programmed — to determine ideal spots for catching traffic violators. Once a hiding spot has been located, the vehicle uses sensors such as lasers, cameras or some combinatio­n thereof to monitor traffic in the most efficient way possible, according to the patent.

“Autonomous police vehicle may determine the threshold speed for a given section of road by searching a local traffic laws database for a legal speed limit for that section of road or by querying remote central computing system,” the patent says.

The vehicle would be able to communicat­e wirelessly with other vehicles on the road and determine whether a car is in self-driving mode or being controlled by a human driver, according to the patent. The patent says the offending vehicle would be able to communicat­e with the police car as well, providing a driver’s licence, for example.

But Ford noted in a statement that even if the patent is approved, it does not ensure that a product will be produced.

“We submit patents on innovative ideas as a normal course of business,” the statement said. “Patent applicatio­ns are intended to protect new ideas but aren’t necessaril­y an indication of new business or product plans.”

 ?? SYSTEM/DREAMSTIME ?? Ford’s applicatio­n for autonomous police cars, which was submitted in July 2016, is currently under review by the U.S. government.
SYSTEM/DREAMSTIME Ford’s applicatio­n for autonomous police cars, which was submitted in July 2016, is currently under review by the U.S. government.

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