
Brake Lights on the Front of Your Car? They're Being Studied—and Could Prevent More Crashes
The scenario reads like this: you're in your car, stopped at an intersection—but cross traffic isn't required to stop. You want to pull out, either to go straight through the intersection or to turn, and look over and see a car approaching from one side. Is that driver slowing down? Their blinker is on, but what is their intention? Do they see you stopped there? You can only see the front of the approaching vehicle, so all of that is pretty much a mystery—because the brake lights that'd tell you more, well, are on the other side of the car.
You seem to have time to pull out and complete your maneuver—do you take the risk of a potential crash, assuming that approaching vehicle is slowing down (giving you more time to act)? This is a nearly everyday occurrence for most American drivers, and many of them do end up taking that risk and becoming another crash statistic. A study suggests that there might be an easy and immediate solution to this guessing game of vehicular roulette: brake lights visible from the front and sides of new vehicles.
It's not a totally crazy or infeasible idea, as the story from ZME Science points out. It can be difficult to discern whether another vehicle's nose is dipping because it's slowing, especially from a distance; many modern vehicles boast body control that snuffs out that behavior almost entirely compared to, say, large land yachts from the 1970s. In other words, the most obvious way to determine what another vehicle is doing—if you can only see it from the front—is to rely on some sort of indicator at the front and sides of vehicles that could signal to other motorists and pedestrians whether or not it's slowing down. Again, such information is critical to cross traffic and especially to pedestrians.
While you might be thinking this thinking would lead to a bright red light fitted to the front and sides of a vehicle—which is illegal in the FMVSS and further still by many state laws on forward and side lighting—the study by Graz University of Austria, Comenius University of Slovakia, and the Bonn Institute for Legal and Traffic Psychology of Germany suggests that these forward brake lights be green in color. A logical idea considering that a front green light would automatically be associated with the sign that you're good to go, just like a standard traffic light. The study suggests that front-facing brake indicator lights—not even including side brake lights—could reduce intersection collisions by 17 percent and could possibly lessen injury related to those types of crashes by 25 percent.
The way this study simulated potential real-world results was by recreating real crashes. In each scenario, three different reaction times were tested between 0.5 second to 1.5 seconds. The faster two of the three reaction times showed between nearly 8 percent to 17 percent of those simulated accidents could have been avoided all together. For nearly 26 percent of those same accidents, the injury severity dropped as the average crash speeds were reduced to around 18 mph from an original high of nearly 28 mph. 10 mph might not seem like much, but that equals to just over a 44 percent difference in kinetic energy for the 4,400-pound weight of your average American vehicle.
We're skeptical of the conclusion drawn in ZME Science by the author suggesting it'd be easy to implement a new light on a modern CAN Bus or Zonal communications vehicle and holding optimism in the speed of NHTSA to implement such a change. More likely, any changes would apply only to newer vehicles going forward, not necessarily retroactively added to existing cars on American roads—older vehicles might simply not support an extra lamp setup, for a variety of technical reasons.
Then there is the challenge of getting a green front light legal for use via NHTSA regulations, let alone local laws on lighting. NHTSA and the FMVSS section 108 only allow for white or clear lenses or lighting for forward illumination and white or amber color or lighting for side and signal lighting. Auxiliary lighting like daytime running, driving lights, or fog lights can be white or amber in color, too. Any other color is not legal on the front or sides of a vehicle.
While Mercedes-Benz has an 'OK' to run turquoise lights—indicating a vehicle in true full-self driving mode on SAE Level 3 prototype vehicles—in a couple of states, this is technically not legal for the rest of the U.S. and is an exception. For something like this to be implemented nationwide, presumably as a required safety fitment, it would need literal Congressional approval and that's only recently come to allow updates to the rules on truly adaptive lighting like that offered for years overseas as part of HR 3684—aka the 2022 Infrastructure Bill—during the Biden Administration.
All of which is to say, the FMVSS will have the final say. Given how today, that same regulatory framework makes it illegal to install LED replacement bulbs in headlight housings originally designed for HID, halogen, or incandescent bulbs, and is only just now being updated to accommodate high tech adaptive lighting technology that's been available elsewhere in the world for years, don't hold your breath that your next car might sprout a set of fancy new signaling lamps.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Caesars Named Among Most Community-Minded U.S. Companies for 11th Year
Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ:CZR) is among the 10 Best Casino Stocks To Buy Now. Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ:CZR) has been designated a 2025 Civic 50 honoree by Points of Light, marking the company's 11th consecutive year on the list of the best community-minded businesses in the United States. A general view of a luxury resort casino, surrounded by a beautiful landscape and illuminated at night. Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ:CZR) donated $3.4 million from the Caesars Foundation to community projects in 2024, totaling over $71 million. The company's dedication to civic participation and social responsibility is shown by the 93,000 volunteer hours that its workers have donated nationwide. Companies with yearly sales of over $1 billion are ranked according to their corporate citizenship by True Impact's Civic 50 and VeraWorks' analysis. Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ:CZR) received recognition for its Extraordinary HERO initiative, which honors outstanding employee accomplishments, and its HERO volunteer program. SVP Kiersten Flint claims that Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ:CZR)' CSR approach, which is defined under the motto 'People, Planet, Play,' directs its environmental and philanthropic initiatives While we acknowledge the potential of CZR as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 High-Growth EV Stocks to Invest In and 13 Best Car Stocks to Buy in 2025. Disclosure. None. Sign in to access your portfolio

Fast Company
35 minutes ago
- Fast Company
Aurora hits a self-driving trucking milestone. But the road ahead is still bumpy
Self-driving vehicle startups have often drawn skepticism for overpromising and underdelivering—see: Argo AI and GM's Cruise subsidiary, both now in corporate junkyards—but in early May, one of them achieved a milestone that had long eluded the industry: delivering a truckload of cargo for a paying customer on public roads—with no human behind the wheel. Aurora's May 1 announcement that it had begun commercial deliveries for its first customers, Hirschbach Motor Lines and Uber Freight, on two autonomous semitrailer trucks between Dallas and Houston followed some eight years of work by the Pittsburgh-based firm. Aurora reached that milestone about half a year later than it had planned last year, owing to extra time needed to complete its 'safety case' testing and self-certification. 'This is a multiyear journey,' says Aurora president Ossa Fisher. 'A few months seemed minuscule in the grand scheme of both the opportunity that lies ahead of us and what came before.' But barely two weeks after the announcement, the company was back to having safety operators sitting behind the wheels of the two trucks.


WIRED
43 minutes ago
- WIRED
JD Vance Is the Loyal Convert in Chief
Jun 27, 2025 6:00 AM Vice president JD Vance is everywhere—and he's the highest point of contact, Trumpworld sources say, for tech billionaires who went all-in on Donald Trump. Photo-illustration: WIRED Staff; Getty Images Vice President JD Vance is on top of the world. Once a critic of President Donald Trump and now his right-hand man, Vance is everywhere—with full MAGA backing. He's on television promoting the US bombing of Iran. He's a repeat guest on Theo Von's podcast. He's reportedly been key to negotiating the tenuous détente between Elon Musk and Trump. He's even carved out time to enjoy an offseason soccer tournament match between a German and South Korean team in Cincinnati on Wednesday. Most importantly, he's also become the highest point of contact in the administration for the Silicon Valley billionaires who helped propel Trump to a second term. The vice president has a much closer relationship with these new players in the GOP than the president does, Trumpworld sources inside and around the administration tell WIRED. Five sources, who all requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, described Vance to me as the most reliable link between the tech industry and the White House, something of a newly constructed bridge between the tech right and the populist MAGA loyalists who stood by Trump through the Capitol riot on January 6. Up-and-comers in the Republican Party have consolidated power thanks to both factions, but with Musk gone for now, Vance is the load-bearing link between the two. To use a venture capital metaphor, though, Vance has only just progressed from his pre-seed to seed funding. 'That is the newest component to the MAGA coalition: the Silicon Valley libertarian wing,' a Trumpworld source who served in the first administration tells me. 'I think they were appreciated and welcomed, but it still remains to be clear how influential they are when it comes to policy. When it comes to personnel, it seems like they've gotten a lot of their girls and guys in … but every billionaire in that room [for the inauguration], what have they gotten for it?' For the 40-year-old Vance, his time working in venture capital and his Trump-era transformation have led him to become, as one Trumpworld source put it, the poster boy for the so-called loyal converts who may not have been on the Trump train in 2016 but have put enough money and social capital into supporting him that there's no turning back. 'Practically everyone in his cabinet is a convert,' this Trumpworld strategist tells me. 'Trump loves nothing more than a convert.' What Vance converted from, in part, is an Iraq War critic who saw Trump as such a threat that he famously once self-described as a 'never-Trumper' and privately said of his future boss, in a Facebook message to a friend, 'I go back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn't be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he's America's Hitler.' After serving in the Marines and graduating from Yale Law School, Vance bounced around from a stint on Capitol Hill in Texas senator John Cornyn's office to a federal clerkship in Kentucky to a brief stint in corporate law before cutting his teeth in the VC field at Mithril Capital, a firm founded by billionaire Peter Thiel. Thiel, the Palantir founder and fellow member of the so-called PayPal Mafia alongside Musk, bankrolled much of Vance's 2022 Senate run. He is perhaps the most mysterious and most feared of Vance's billionaire allies in the Trump administration, the source who served the first time around tells me. And they're happy to see less of him compared to when he played a more publicly active and conventional role as a donor in 2016, including giving a speech at the Republican National Convention, where he notably lamented how 'Instead of going to Mars, we have invaded the Middle East.' In Trumpworld, Thiel now gets credit for 'putting his head down.' ('Now, does that mean he's retreated from politics,' they say, 'or retreated from politics in public?') Thiel did not return a request for comment. The Man Holding the Cards Although Vance partially established his brand in the party as a critic of 'big tech'—including a wariness around data collection, a call to repeal Section 230, and even a willingness to break up some companies under antitrust law—his arrival on the ticket and subsequently in the White House brought with it a worldview and connections to a network of literal elites that have never been a comfortable fit with the populist MAGA wing, the backbone of the Trump movement for the past decade. 'The base always has a suspicion of tech, and Steve Bannon is a good symbol of that,' a Trumpworld source close to the president tells me. 'There's always this high suspicion level with the tech crowd, the tech bros.' 'JD continues to hold those cards with the tech bros,' the source close to Trump tells me. 'I think he's only grown in strength, to the point where, we have an election in 2028 and I think he's the front-runner, but is there even a list of challengers right now?' the former Trump administration official adds. Some Trumpworld sources noted that Vance's role as the ambassador for the libertarian tech right and its eccentric financiers was largely the result of a cash crunch facing the Trump campaign in the run-up to the 2024 general election. Vance proved to be the right man at the right time, the source close to Trump tells me when recalling what they describe as a 'perfect storm' of factors going in Vance's favor this time last year. 'At that point, [Trump] realized you kind of had to do something else.' Just because Silicon Valley figures supported Trump doesn't mean they have his ear directly, at least not all of the time. Larry Ellison, the billionaire executive chairman of Oracle, the expected US buyer of TikTok, has reportedly met privately with Trump several times in recent weeks. But Marc Andreessen, the billionaire investor and former software engineer who writes manifestos in his spare time, gained a reputation in Trumpworld for overplaying his relationship with Trump after he spent time at Mar-a-Lago working on vetting personnel during the transition, a senior administration source tells WIRED. Since then, Trump does not talk to Andreessen 'that much,' the source told me. Andreessen, one of the tech right's top thought leaders and influences on the Silicon Valley wing of the party, exercises his influence 'through the vice president, primarily,' the senior administration source says. Andreessen did not return a request for comment. Another source close to Trump says they have no idea whether the president and Andreessen are close but that the billionaire's chumminess with Vance is well known in Trumpworld. (Andreessen also has a connection to one of Vance's key non-Thiel former employers, Steve Case. Vance progressed in his venture capital career working for Case, the former CEO of AOL who parted ways with a then 28-year-old Andreessen in 1999 after acquiring one of his companies, Netscape, for $4.2 billion.) Keys to the Kingdom Trumpworld's lack of familiarity with many of these tech and VC players has largely worked to Vance's advantage so far. What has OG Trumpworld's attention, however, are the times where Vance has shown a willingness to raise distinct objections to the president and top advisers—or even question how much Trump knows about what his own administration is doing. What stood out from Signalgate, the former Trump administration official says, 'was the dissension around JD Vance, who said 'Why are we doing this?' He actually questioned whether Donald Trump totally understood or appreciated the situation.' A source familiar with the vice president's thinking tells WIRED, 'This was not 'dissent.' The vice president was deliberating privately with his colleagues to ensure the president's team had properly briefed the president on the range of options available to him to ensure he was fully empowered to make the best decisions possible, as he did.' The White House did not return a request for comment. Vance has gotten adept at anticipating situations where he runs the risk of publicly displaying too much daylight between himself and the president, but a Monday night appearance on Fox News with Bret Baier caught the attention of the source inside the administration. The vice president said he saw a slightly altered draft of Trump's Truth Social post announcing the Israel-Iran ceasefire a few hours before but did not specify what the changes were before Trump made the announcement minutes earlier. Baier asked Vance if 'there's any mixed message' when Trump used the term 'regime change' on Truth Social, and the vice president played interpreter—while also finding a way to shoehorn AI into the conversation. 'Well I think what the president is saying very clearly, Bret, is, if the Iranian people want to do something about their own leadership, that's up to the Iranian people,' Vance said, even though Trump did not at all specify that in his 'regime change' post that Baier also read aloud on-air. 'What the American national security interest here is very simple: it's to destroy the nuclear program, that's what we've done, and now that the 12-day war appears to be effectively over, we have an opportunity, I think, to restart a real peace process. And Bret, this is not just about two countries, Iran and Israel. All of these Gulf Arab states, they want peace, they want to invest, they want to build artificial intelligence, hardware, they want to sort of come into the new economy, and that was impossible when you had Iran, as the president said, acting like a bully across the Middle East.' Vance creating a little wiggle room for himself every now and then, the Trumpworld source close to the president says, could be key to hanging onto the support of what they derisively referred to as 'the tech bros.' 'I don't know if they're still on board with the Trump train or not,' this Republican tells me, 'but they certainly have access to a lot of funds if JD eventually becomes the heir apparent in 2028.' With the money train behind him, at least for the time being, Vance has the keys to the kingdom waiting for him. 'Right now, I think his standing is still strong among the base. We have seen, historically, very icy relationships between presidents and vice presidents,' the former Trump official says. 'We have not yet seen that with Trump and Vance. But people are looking for it—they're looking under the hood.' The Chatroom Former Florida congressman and short-lived Trump 2.0 attorney general nominee Matt Gaetz went semi-viral on TikTok this week when a user posted a video of him appearing to scroll through texts with his mother. The conversation, carried out from Gaetz's end in an exceedingly large font, touched on subjects ranging from President Trump's bombing of Iran to how much money is in Gaetz's bank account ($500,000, he was proud to say). I had a brief text exchange with Gaetz in which he confirmed the authenticity of the exchange. Around 15 minutes after I texted him, he tweeted the following: 'Apparently someone sitting behind me on a flight recorded me without my found me texting my mother about news of the day, family finances, and working on my laptop. Please let this be a reminder to everyone to CALL YOUR MOTHER! (and maybe get a screen protector)' Have good recommendations for screen protectors? Leave a comment on the site or send your thoughts to mail@ WIRED Reads Want more? Subscribe now for unlimited access to WIRED. What Else We're Reading 🔗 Trump Administration Restaffs National Security Council After Cutting Its Size: At the direction of Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is filling in as acting national security adviser, the White House is looking for reinforcements on foreign policy challenges after clearing house at the NSC. (Bloomberg) 🔗 Behind Trump's 2024 Victory, a More Racially and Ethnically Diverse Voter Coalition: Trump came even closer to winning Latino voters in the 2024 election than was previously known, and performed better across ethnic groups than he did in 2020 or 2016. (Pew Research Center) The Download Our flagship show Uncanny Valley explores Disney and Universal's lawsuit against Midjourney, which could be consequential for the future of how intellectual property is treated in the AI era. Listen now. Thanks again for subscribing. You can find me on Bluesky or on Signal at Leak2Lahut.26.