literature.cafe

515 readers
12 users here now
(and anyone else, really)

This is a general special interest lemmy instance focusing on lovers of all things pertaining to reading and writing and all of the people that enjoy it as well as fandoms and niches that exist within reading circles. We federate with other instances, with our local communities being focused primarily on the above.

If you want to federate a new community, go to lemmyverse.net and copy a link to a community and paste it into the search bar. Be patient!

Also, consider installing instance assistant to better navigate lemmy and find communities better! Find links to download them here: firefox, chrome, edge


Instance Rules
  1. Keep it cozy. (No -isms, bigotry, gatekeeping, or general disrespect. Just be nice!)
  2. Please, no visual porn. (Smut and discussion of smut is OK as long as it is tagged as NSFW.)
  3. No spam.
  4. Be mindful of other instance rules.
  5. Keep self-promo to a minimum.
  6. Tag AI generated content as such.
  7. Please avoid piracy.

Server Info

Registration is open with human approval, just to make sure there's no bots afoot. Approval should take less than a day (and are sometimes near instant)

Please check your spam folder for an email from noreply@literature.cafe if you are having difficulty finding email confirmation.

Community creation is enabled. When creating new communities please be mindful of the instance focus.

If you have any issues or concerns, please message an admin

Fediseer Guarantees


For those visiting from other instances, we have a community directory to make finding communities easier: !411@literature.cafe


We also have alternative lemmy UIs to use for those who want them.

A familiar UI - old.literature.cafe

Photon - ph.literature.cafe

Tesseract (photon fork with more multimedia focused features) - t.literature.cafe


Donations are greatly appreciated and go entirely to server costs but are not required.

List of Patrons Daily Uptime Ratio Weekly Uptime Ratio Average Response Time

founded 1 year ago
ADMINS
1
2
 
 

Cyclists and pedestrians are reporting a rise in distracted driving. The phenomenon is both real and legal in many states.


Last month, Geoff Glaab was waiting at a stop light in Louisville, Kentucky when he saw a driver two lanes over watching a Youtube video about tearing down a car engine. Glaab could hear the audio clearly because the driver had the volume very high. While the driver was at the light, Glaab could see him looking down at his phone.

Glaab primarily gets around by walking or biking and says he sees “far more than my fair share of distracted drivers.” But he told Motherboard he’s recently noticed an increase in people watching video and FaceTiming while driving.

“I don't know when people began to think this was a good idea,” Glaab said, “but here we are.”

Amazingly, it is perfectly legal for drivers in Kentucky to watch Youtube or any other video while driving. Kentucky only explicitly bans texting while driving and provides exemptions for using GPS functions and punching in phone numbers. It also doesn’t forbid browsing social media or other app-like functions. In a 2015 Courier Journal story about how hard it is to enforce the texting-while-driving ban, state trooper Paul Blanton said, “The way the law is written, you could be driving down the road playing Angry Birds.”

Kentucky may be an extreme case of weak distracted driving laws, but it is hardly alone. Many states have laws that were written at a time when panic regarding texting while driving was at its peak. Every state except Montana enacted some kind of texting while driving ban, and 27 states ban hand-held phone conversations. But at the time these laws were written, streaming video on phones was not nearly as common as it is now, nor were wireless network speeds fast enough to make it worth doing while driving. Therefore, many of the laws are vague at best about whether watching video while driving is illegal.

“Distracted driving” became a major safety subject in the mid 2000s with the proliferation of cell phones. There is no debate among experts that distracted driving is dangerous—comparable, according to some studies, with driving under the influence. In 2021, 3,522 people died in distracted driving crashes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, a number that has remained relatively steady since 2010 despite countless public service advisories, ad campaigns, and other educational initiatives. But distracted driving rates are only increasing, because most drivers now have phones mounted in front of them at all times and also most new cars come with gigantic screens built into the dash compatible with streaming services and gaming devices.. And some people are taking it to new heights by watching full-on videos, live TV, Netflix, and other streaming content while driving.

In the past few months, I have personally seen four drivers watching videos as their cars passed me. It was easy to notice because the phones were mounted on the dash. One was watching football, another baseball, and the other two some random video I couldn’t discern. Two Motherboard staffers told me they’ve recently been in Ubers where their drivers were watching TV on iPads mounted next to the center console. (Uber spokesperson Gabi Condarco told Motherboard, “When signing up for the Uber platform, couriers and drivers agree to our Community Guidelines which clearly state drivers are expected to maintain an environment that makes riders feel safe, and reports of dangerous driving may result in account deactivation.”)

The rise in watching-while-driving is not merely a matter of anecdata. Last year, an Insurance Institute for Highway Safety survey on distracted driving found about 25 percent of drivers reported watching movies, TV shows, or video clips while driving at some point in the last 30 days, with about 15 percent saying they did so regularly. About 20 percent said they made video calls regularly in the previous month and about 15 percent recorded and posted video. Although “distracted driving” is most commonly associated with teens in public service campaigns, millennials aged 25-34 had the highest rates of watching videos, playing games, and scrolling social media while driving. Unsurprisingly given how central smartphones are to their work, gig economy workers like rideshare drivers reported they were four times as likely to engage in distracted driving behavior.

There are two types of laws that speak to watching videos while driving, according to IIHS assistant general counsel Danielle Wolf. The first is distracted driving laws specifically targeting cell phone use. Currently, eight states—Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Massachusetts, Tennessee, and West Virginia—clearly ban watching video while driving under such electronic device laws. Four more “arguably” ban it, according to Wolf—Connecticut, DC, Washington, Wisconsin—because their laws define distracted driving as anything that diverts attention from the driving task.

Separately, 35 states have bans on screens in the driver’s line of sight, Wolf says. But several, such as New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and South Dakota, are specific to television and television broadcasts and therefore wouldn’t necessarily apply to internet videos or FaceTiming. Several other states like Oregon, Utah, and Texas have screen-in-view laws but the language may not apply to phones or tablets mounted on dashboards because they refer to vehicles “equipped” with certain characteristics or vehicles having screens “installed.”

Overall, Motherboard found 18 states definitely ban watching videos on phones while driving, 19 might depending on how the law is interpreted, and 14 almost certainly do not.

read more: https://www.vice.com/en/article/epvkd7/more-people-are-watching-videos-on-their-phones-while-driving-often-its-perfectly-legal

view more: next ›