He drove into a creek and died in North Carolina. His family blames Google Maps.

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The lawsuit raises a question for GPS developers: Who is liable when injuries or fatalities occur because of faulty directions?

An unmarked, collapsed bridge in Hickory, North Carolina.
An unmarked, collapsed bridge where Philip Paxson, 47, died in Hickory, N.C. Saltz Mongeluzzi Bendesky via The New York Times

By Jenny Gross, New York Times Service

September 22, 2023 | 9:06 AM

The family of a North Carolina man who drowned last year after he drove off a collapsed bridge while following Google Maps directions has sued Google for negligence, saying that the company’s failure to update its maps led directly to his death.

Philip Paxson, 47, a medical device salesperson, was on his way home from his daughter’s camping-themed ninth birthday party in Hickory, North Carolina, on Sept. 30, 2022, navigating a rainy night on unfamiliar roads, when he drove off a collapsed roadway into a creek and drowned, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in Wake County Superior Court on Tuesday.

Alicia Paxson, his wife, also sued two businesses and an individual who the lawsuit says owned, controlled or were responsible for the collapsed bridge, which was unmarked, with no barricades.

Paxson had taken their two daughters home from the party in her car, while her husband stayed late to clean up and drove separately, she said in an interview.

“This is horrific, what our family is going through,” she said.

When she thinks about how easily it could have been prevented, given that people had warned Google about the dangerous route it was suggesting, “it just kills me,” she said. Paxson said she searched her husband’s phone after the accident and found that he had looked up directions home from the party on Google Maps.

A Google spokesperson, José Castañeda, said in a statement that the company, which is owned by Alphabet, had the deepest sympathies for the Paxson family. “Our goal is to provide accurate routing information in Maps, and we are reviewing this lawsuit,” he said.

Google Maps has for years directed drivers to cross the bridge, which collapsed in 2013, according to the lawsuit. In November 2020, Google Maps acknowledged receipt of a complaint that a Hickory resident had submitted about the dangerous route recommendation, but it continued to suggest the route, according to the lawsuit.

“This was a crater literally in the middle of a residential neighborhood,” said Robert Zimmerman, a lawyer for Paxson. “It’d be one thing if it was there for a day or a week, but it was there for nine years.”

Nearly a year after Philip Paxson’s death, Zimmerman said, the bridge has not been repaired, and Google Maps is still directing drivers to cross it.

Google and the other defendants — Hinckley Gauvain LLC; Tarde LLC; and James Tarlton, who, according to state records, owns Tarde — would be served with the lawsuit paperwork in the coming weeks, Zimmerman said. The companies and Tarlton could not immediately be reached, and it was not clear if they had legal representation.

Zimmerman said that there was no valid reason for the companies and Tarlton, who were responsible for maintaining the bridge, to have left it in such a dangerous state for so long, with no barricades, warning signs or lighting around it.

A spokesperson for the North Carolina Department of Transportation said in an email Thursday that “the section of road where this incident occurred is owned by a private entity” and that the department “has no legal authority to make improvements to this location.”

The lawsuit said that Google Maps and other mapping and navigation platforms had the responsibility to update their maps in a timely manner and to correct routes once they were notified of hazards.

The lawsuit raises a question for GPS developers: Who is liable when injuries or fatalities occur because of faulty directions?

The question has become particularly relevant for Google Maps, the most popular mapping service in the United States. In 2018, 72% of smartphone users looked up directions on Google Maps, according to Statista, a market insight company. The next most popular app was Waze, which is owned by Google, which was used by 12% of smartphone owners that year.

GPS services have come under criticism not just for directing drivers through hazardous routes but also for disorienting hikers. Mountaineering Scotland, a climbing organization, and the John Muir Trust, a charity that maintains natural areas in Britain, have warned that Google Maps may direct hikers to trails that would lead them over cliffs and rocky, steep terrain.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : The Boston Globe – https://www.boston.com/news/national-news/2023/09/22/north-carolina-creek-fatal-crash-family-blames-google-maps/

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