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CultureMay 16, 2026
Self-driving cars take over a neighborhood as residents fear for the safety of their pets and kids
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Around 50 Waymo cars took over a residential neighborhood one morning, causing concern for residents, as they feared for the safety of their pets and kids.
NEW: 50 empty Waymos invade Atlanta neighborhoods and circle their cul-de-sacs for hours early in the mornings.
Residents say they are getting waymo traffic than usual and have tried combating the cars with a neon green sign, which only made the problem worse.
The Waymos… pic.twitter.com/qBklKCry6F
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) May 15, 2026
In Atlanta, Waymo’s self-driving cars give rides through Uber. It is unclear how dozens of these vehicles ended up on a quiet cul-de-sac, but the situation has given way to more questions than answers.
According to WABTV:
On a dead end street, Waymo after Waymo after Waymo drives on, usually early in the morning.
“I think yesterday morning, we had 50 cars that came through between 6 and 7,” a neighbor told Channel 2 Action News.
Residents on Battleview Drive said they started seeing the autonomous, driverless cars about two months ago, but the groups and large numbers of Waymos just circling in and out only started the last couple of weeks.
How would you act if this is what you woke up to? How did they even target this street? Is this what the cars do when they have nowhere to go? Did an algorithm prioritize these residents?
Again, the situation has given way to more questions than answers.
When one resident put a Step2Kid sign up in the street, it blocked all of the Waymos from entering the cul-de-sac, but how that played out was a surprise for those living there.
“We had, at one point, eight Waymos that were stuck trying to figure out how to turn around,” the neighbor said.
The Waymos are empty and not picking up anyone, and parents are worried, saying it’s not just excessive, but dangerous.
It is still unknown why this street or the residents were targeted by the AI-driven cars, but Waymo has clarified that they have corrected the “routing behavior.”
- YouTube www.youtube.com
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