Waymo declined to reply questions from WIRED about what number of cameras are inside its automobiles, precisely how lengthy footage is retained, and whether or not the corporate has ever turned over footage to US federal legislation enforcement or a department of the navy. Karp did word, nevertheless, that the corporate’s engineering group typically makes use of data from sensors, together with video footage and different information, to run simulations aimed toward enhancing its expertise. She says Waymo additionally places limits on each who can entry information and the way lengthy it’s retained.
Waymo’s robotaxi service is currently available within the Phoenix metro space and components of San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Austin, Texas. Within the firm’s comparatively quick time working in US cities, it has proven a willingness to adjust to requests for footage from legislation enforcement.
Officers working for the Mesa Police Division and the Chandler Police Division in Arizona have been requesting and utilizing footage from Waymos for legal investigations since 2016, or about as long as the vehicles have been of their cities, according to reporting from Phoenix’s ABC 15. Police instructed the information outlet in 2022 that they’ve used the footage for a number of circumstances, together with an alleged highway rage incident. (The person pleaded responsible after being charged with disorderly conduct.)
In Might 2022, two months after Waymo started limited robotaxi operations in San Francisco, Vice reported {that a} coaching doc for San Francisco police explicitly instructed officers that “autonomous automobiles” have footage that might typically “assist with investigative leads.”
As of 2023, Waymo had been issued not less than 9 search warrants in San Francisco and Arizona’s Maricopa County, its major markets on the time, based on reporting from Bloomberg. One of many circumstances concerned the homicide of an Uber driver in 2021. Whereas San Francisco police stated they couldn’t establish a particular Waymo automobile that was close to the crime scene, an officer argued that there was “possible trigger” that Waymo automobiles had been “driving across the space” and had footage of the sufferer, potential suspects, and the crime scene, based on a search warrant considered by Bloomberg. Waymo complied and supplied footage, but it surely finally didn’t result in the arrest of the suspect, who was convicted of the homicide in 2023.
Final yr, WIRED reported that Waymo had sued two people for allegedly vandalizing its automobiles in San Francisco and had digicam footage from the automobiles of the alleged incidents. (One of many circumstances is ongoing; the opposite was dismissed final month.)
Waymo’s video-recording and data-collection practices aren’t distinctive. All automobiles with self-driving capabilities depend on a mix of lidar, radar, and video information to be able to function. Cruise, the now defunct self-driving-car enterprise run by Normal Motors, also reportedly gave camera footage to legislation enforcement upon request.
Personal house owners of camera-equipped automobiles can even voluntarily flip over digicam footage to legislation enforcement. For instance, police in Berkeley, California, have obtained not less than two units of footage from the proprietor of a Tesla Cybertruck who stated their automobile was vandalized twice this yr, based on paperwork obtained by WIRED by way of public file request.
Extra reporting by Paresh Dave.