Google's new self-driving prototype car is presented during a demonstration at the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif., back in May. (Photo: Tony Avelar/AP Photo)

(Bloomberg) — Imagine a robot car with no one behind the wheel hitting another driverless car. Who’s at fault?

The answer: No one knows. But plaintiff’s lawyers are salivating at the prospects for big paydays from such accidents. If computers routinely crash, they say, then so will cars operated by them. And with no one behind the wheel, lawyers say they can go after almost anyone even remotely involved.

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