Mine tend to creep toward the edges, losing it's reference to center. I have to either correct it, and it slowly creeps again, or take over for that part. only happens in white gravel, or snow covered road with no.visible markings. Gravel roads tent to have 3 trails as people roll on the shared middle trail, and diverge only on encounters. FSD seem to try to keep hugging the sides.
So far, One trillion seems to help transition to renewable energe, move us closet to becone a multi-planetary specie, make available broadband internet everywhere on the planet, help paraplegic people gain new ways of freedom, allow for an optimised new kind of metro station, enable ride sharing at a never before seen level and provide a new low cost freight transport solution.
They did carbon dating on the CO2 in the air, and it's proven to be the millions years old carbon that was stored in the oil that we released back in the atmosphere. (Reading the isotopes) It's been scientifically proven that most of the carbon present is this. Not the one we create when we breathe out. So it is false to pretend we aren't having an impact on climate.
I agree to a point. Right now, it is hard to quantify job displacement as it's happening. But in a few years, when robotaxis have replaced almost all taxi drivers, when fleets of truckers are replaced, when automated Rombas with additionnal integrated tools to empty trashes replace all janitors, when every companies have automatic cashiers. Yes the companies will be taxed more. But it's going to be an automation tax. Those who are still doing unautomated work, employing construction workers won't have that tax. Then how do you quantify that tax? a flat % of profits? a tax on robot purchase? a tax on automated productivity? This is still (us as an example) arguable.
Yet we know truckers will eventually lose their jobs. Some will maybe manage fleets, but most will have to find something else. Taxi drivers, low level support technicians are already seeing lower client tickets because clients use AI before calling for costly support. Taxing a small amount on each robot hourly labor as a virtual wage. (imagine 1 or 2$ an hour) for eventually bilions of robots serving humanity. Low end, a tax for UBI for those that have lost their jobs and have no prospect of finding another one because so many are displaced. High end, everything is free, and no need to tax anything: Musk's Utopian dream.
We know this last one isn't going to happen outright. First scenario is going to happen and going to slowly become scenario 2. In between, we might want to tax AI labor.