The most important car magazine in Italy ("Quattroruote") performed a test on ISA systems recently.
The outcome was a real disaster, partly due to faults in the system, and partly to the miserable conditions (in average) of street signals in Italy.
For instance, while driving on a highway, the ISA read the speed limit on an exit ramp (in Italy they are always insanely low, set at 40 km/h), and the car abruptly slowed down from the regular limit (110 or 130km/h) to 40 km/h. Chances of being reared: roughly 100%.
Moreover the ISA couldn't understand when a reduced speed limit was specific to some kind of vehicle, like lorries.
Through the 40 kms of the test, they encountered 32 speed-limit changes, and 4 of them were in the span of few hundreds meters.
I guess it was like being driven by a drunk auto-pilot...

Overall, the ISA made 28 mistakes in the span of the test, and the magazine concluded that they are not ready for being used on ordinary roads (will they ever be, anyway?).
Maybe the EU (and politicians worldwide) should listen carefully to this kind of tests and to the feedback by daily drivers before imposing a safety threatening system like this, not to mention the option to make it permanent one day.
Otherwise the Mk1 would became the last GRY to own, I guess. (This is also to justify the posting about ISA in the MY2024 thread...

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