http://www.arnnet.com.au/article/552686

The U.S. government wants to force cars to talk to each other over wireless 
networks, saying that could save more than 1,000 lives every year.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is seeking input 
about a possible federal standard for vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) technology, 
which would let cars automatically exchange information, such as whether 
they're close to each other. 

The agency will accept comments from the public and industry for 60 days from 
when the advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) is published in the 
Federal Register.

V2V would let cars do some of the work of driving or even accomplish things 
humans can't, such as virtually "seeing" into blind intersections before 
entering them. 

It may be one step on the path to self-driving cars.

On Monday, the NHTSA published a research report on V2V and issued an ANPRM in 
hopes of collecting a lot of feedback before issuing a full NPRM in 2016. In 
the report, it estimated the safety benefits of just two possible applications 
of V2V, called Left Turn Assist and Intersection Movement Assist. Together, 
they could prevent as many as 592,000 crashes and save 1,083 lives per year, 
the agency said.

Neither system would necessarily take control of a car. Left Turn Assist would 
warn drivers not to turn left into the path of an oncoming car, and 
Intersection Movement Assist would warn them not to enter an intersection when 
there's a high probability of crashing into other vehicles there. The two 
technologies could help drivers avoid more than half of those types of crashes, 
the agency said. 

Other V2V systems could include blind spot, do not pass, and forward collision 
warnings, as well as stop light and stop sign warnings.

"V2V technology represents the next great advance in saving lives," U.S. 
Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a press release.

In addition to improving safety, V2V might smooth the flow of traffic and 
improve cars' fuel economy, the NHTSA said.

V2V would run over wireless networks using the IEEE 802.11p specification, a 
variant of the standard used for Wi-Fi, on a band of spectrum between 5.85GHz 
and 5.925GHz. That's crucial to making the technology work between vehicles 
from different manufacturers, NHTSA said. V2V doesn't identify individual 
vehicles, nor does it collect or share personal information about drivers, and 
it would have layers of security and privacy technology to protect users, the 
agency said.   

By Stephen Lawson (IDG News Service) on 19 August, 2014
--

Expect the above might soon be extended to ID nearby cars for car-park bumps 
etc, perhaps, from insurance company pressure.

Cheers,
Stephen
 
                                          
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