[SystemSafety] Move fast and break things

Robert P. Schaefer rps at mit.edu
Wed Oct 17 20:09:38 CEST 2018


John Downer has some useful things to say on this topic:

Watching the Watchmaker: On Regulating the Social in Lieu of the Technical, Center for analysis of risk and regulation, Discussion paper 54, June 2009

When Failure is an Option: Redundancy, reliability and regulation in complex technical systems, , Center for analysis of risk and regulation, Discussion paper 53, May 2009

On Oct 17, 2018, at 1:54 PM, Olwen Morgan <olwen at phaedsys.com<mailto:olwen at phaedsys.com>> wrote:



No disrespect, Martyn, but this seems to me like an "elephant-in-the-room" situation. It takes very little thought (aka gedanken-experimentation) to see that such vehicles will be fraught with dangers. You have only to ask what dangers are reasonably foreseeable to get a laundry-list of them. As the old saw goes, "You won't catch me up in one of those things."

Obviously regulators have to address such matters in their charming, institutionalised, bureaucratic way and they do need a formalised investigative/consultative process to do their jobs. But this always raises the question of whether their procedural pirouettes are more part of the problem than part of the solution. In this case, I suspect it is the former. What are they trying to do here? Ensure aviation safety or promote the development of aviation businesses (incidentally the same conflict of purpose that has often afflicted the US FAA)? Outset mindset is the mother of tombstone mentality

I suppose we'll all have to hope that sanity checks kick in early in the process - but bureaucracies don't exactly have an exemplary track record in that respect.

And of course, the much broader issue is why we are devoting so much effort (and carbon) to moving people around when modern economies could achieve comparable results simply by moving information instead. Only the fittest genes survive. The same goes for memes  and both can die out by extinction of species.

Olwen


On 17/10/2018 16:39, Martyn Thomas wrote:

At least the regulator is trying to state and to consult on the
certification requirements and allowable failure probabilities. Contrast
that with the absence of any such requirements at the moment, in the
case of cars that have an autonomous capability.

When will we see an equivalent consultation for "driverless" cars?

Martyn


On 17/10/2018 16:32, Olwen Morgan wrote:


Wasn't it Henry Ford who once said that people can't even drive
properly in two dimensions?

ROTFLMFAO! - not at you, Derek, but at the arrant stupidity of
regulators.


On 17/10/2018 16:17, Derek M Jones wrote:


All,

Readers might wan to fit down while reading:
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/10/16/easa_vtol_air_taxi_regulation/



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