General Motors Files Patent for Blockchain-Based Autonomous Vehicle Navigation Map

Devashish Bhuyan  Apr 06, 2020 06:00  UTC 22:00

2 Min Read

 

Major car manufacturer American multinational corporation General Motors filed a patent on October 1, 2018, which uses the application of blockchain technology and integrates vehicle sensors to build a much-improved navigation map for autonomous vehicles.  

 

The patent was filed on October 1, 2018. However, it was only recently published on the official site of the US Patent & Trademark Office. According to the patent, the existing maps are difficult to keep dynamic without incurring large costs.  

 

"A system for updating a distributed navigation map for a motor vehicle includes one or more sensors that evaluate and characterize a surrounding around the motor vehicle and a discrepancy detector that identifies differences in the surroundings compared to a known navigation map based on information received from the one or more sensors. The differences are transmitted to a blockchain map network," the patent read. 

 

The company's solution to improve the current navigation map and make the blockchain-based navigation map work is to share a load of data collection to many vehicles when they simply drive around in the city. The data collected in real-time will then be working with discrepancy detectors that check the incoming data with existing maps.  

 

Any difference detected will then be transmitted to the blockchain network and will be cross-checked if a similar pattern has been observed by other moving vehicles. According to the patent, the network will be maintained by the vehicles and mining nodes in the data centers. 

 

This blockchain-based navigation system was earlier designed for the General Motor's 'Super Cruise' feature. The 'Super Cruise' feature exhibits a semi-automated driving experience for some luxury models of the company. The sharing of load for data collection to generate a navigation map will speed up the company's effort to cover most of the roads on the US Soil. 

 

The process eventually makes all the vehicles moving around to contribute to building one single map which is also being claimed to be one of the benefits of using blockchain technology in this system. 

 

 

Image via Shutterstock


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