Direction: All the prepositions have been removed from the next part of the text. at — for — in — off — on — to — with Google Car Crash: Who’s to Blame When a Driverless Car Has an Accident? (PART 2) As things stand, the law still focuses specific car regulations (1) human drivers. The International Vienna Convention for Road Traffic gives responsibility (2) _______ the car to the driver, saying “[e]very driver shall (3) _______ all times be able to control his vehicle”. Drivers also have to have the physical and mental ability to control the car and reasonable knowledge and skill to prevent the car harming others. Similarly, in UK law the person using the car is generally liable (4) _______ its actions. ... When it comes to the driver’s responsibility, current law requires drivers (5) _______ take the same amount (6) _________ care no matter how technologically advanced the car is or their level of familiarity (7) _______ that technology. Drivers are expected to demonstrate reasonable levels of competence and if they fail to monitor the car or create a foreseeable risk of damage or harm they are in breach of their duty of care. This implies that without a change in the law, self-driving cars won’t allow us to take our eyes (8) _______ the roads or take a nap at the wheel. The current law means that if a self-driving car crashes then responsibility lies (9) _______ the person that was negligent, whether that’s the driver (10) _______ not taking due care or the manufacturer for producing a faulty product. It makes sense for the driver to still be held responsible when you consider that autonomous software has (11) _______ follow a set of rational rules and still isn’t as good as humans at dealing with the unexpected. (12) _______ the case of the Google crash, the car assumed that the bus driver was rational and would give way. A human would (or should) know that this won’t always be the case. breach (n; v) “in breach of” — a failure to do what is required by a law or an agreement. duty of care — a legal or moral responsibility to make sure that other people are safe and well. foresee (v) — to see or become aware of (something that has not yet happened); foreseeable (adj).