Apple is building a self-driving car in Silicon Valley, and is scouting for secure locations in the San Francisco Bay area to test it, the Guardian has learned. Documents show the oft-rumoured Apple car project appears to be further along than many suspected.
In May, engineers from Apple’s secretive Special Project group met with officials from GoMentum Station, a 2,100-acre former naval base near San Francisco that is being turned into a high-security testing ground for autonomous vehicles.
In correspondence obtained by the Guardian under a public records act request, Apple engineer Frank Fearon wrote: “We would ... like to get an understanding of timing and availability for the space, and how we would need to coordinate around other parties who would be using [it].”
Automobile manufacturing is a radical departure from Apple's core business. Can they pull it off?
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 15 2015, @07:53PM
I don't have a cellphone, but your logic is nonsensical. The fact that your privacy is already violated in some ways doesn't mean you should increase the ways your privacy is violated, and increase the number of companies that violate your privacy. Yeah, let's make the problem even worse!
And the issue isn't only privacy, but software freedom.