Volvo's autonomous driving car model on display at an auto show in Los Angeles, the United States, in November 2015. [Photo/China Daily] |
"Take Baidu for example. If it knows where you go, what times you typically travel, and the music and entertainment that you use while driving, it can gain a much better understanding of your behavior," she said.
"The data it gathers from the pattern of your behaviors can help it better identify the service you need, and it can profit easily by selling a movie ticket and booking a restaurant."
Wang Jin of Baidu said that to make a premium car such as Mercedes Benz perform all its functions flawlessly, engineers need to write 65 million lines of code.
But making cars smart will need more than 300 million lines of code. "And a fully autonomous car will be much more complicated than that," he said.
So much so, some of the engineers working with Baidu's autonomous driving vehicle unit write code when riding the prototype car.