There's a great article today about various cars in the US that offer self-driving features.  https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/car-tech/what-weve-learned-from-tesla-and-other-self-driving-system-crashes/ar-AAyqWFy?ocid=spartandhp  Some drivers appear to be treating these features like they are more than bleeding edge technology.  It appears the industry is still young and drivers need to continue to be responsible for themselves for a while longer.   

My own experience in a new car with advanced cruise control (will automatically slow down to avoid a rear-end collision) and has lane drift warnings is a mixed bag.  The slow-down feature keeps me farther from the car ahead of me when I'm in heavy traffic.  The result is that drivers in an adjacent lane will take advantage of the space and pull in front of me, at which time the slow-down feature slows my car even more, and that event repeats with my car gradually slowing down more and more.   One thing I really like, though, about the feature is that when the deceleration is urgent, the car vibrates and gets my immediate attention.   

Bottom line, though, even though some folks really appear to want a chauffeur, it's too soon to rely completely on self driving features.