February 8, 2021
Ford has started sharing its own car data which includes airbag activations, emergency braking, and fog light usage with other manufacturers. These signals are a good indication of something problematic on the road, according to Engadget. Once that information has been sent to the cloud, it can be redistributed to other drivers who are taking a similar route. According to Ford, these alerts can also be passed on to emergency services, increasing their general awareness and shortening response times.
The information is more useful, however, if it’s being shared with other companies. Because of this, the data for Road Safety initiative is also involved in the initiative, meant to create a “Safety-Related Traffic Information (SRTI) ecosystem” that benefits all drivers. Last month, a five-year agreement had been struck between multiple car manufacturers, component suppliers, road traffic authorities, EU member states, and locat
autoevolution 21 Jan 2021, 13:11 UTC ·
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With the advent of connected and autonomous cars, many experts and interested automakers hope to increase road safety beyond our wildest imagination. But we all know that it’s probably impossible to get there in a single, giant leap. So, baby steps might do the trick – if there’s enough of them. 8 photos
The second-largest U.S. automaker is taking such an incremental step forward alongside its partners. Ford’s European subsidiary has recently announced that (some of) its cars will become eligible to share information about eventual road hazards or safety incidents with vehicles from other automakers.