Yes, exactly, it was said that you would need full AI to defeat humans in a game like chess (sounds familiar?). Turn's out chess wasn't that hard. Driving is a tougher problem perhaps, but there's nothing magical about that either.
Driving in a complex real world environment (i.e. one that a human driver could handle) is a totally different task than mastering a game with fixed rules.
Hardly.
Actually, since the mid 90s, quite a lot of people uttered something like "Robocup is the next AI challenge" .
http://theconversation.com/why-football-not-chess-is-the-true-final-frontier-for-robotic-artificial-intelligence-62296https://medium.com/syncedreview/having-notched-impressive-victories-over-human-professionals-in-go-atari-games-and-most-recently-30b88ee363e9To solve Go you needed neural nets, so that was a bigger step forward (but it was still old technology that suddenly had enough computing power to make it practically useful).
Hard to say if Go couldn't have been beaten with traditional algorithms just because nobody managed (up to now). Anyway, it's still a very well defined environment with very strict rules and without realtime requirements (turn based like chess), so something like playing soccer on the level of humans is actually much more challenging.
Hardly.
Robot Soccer is not believed to require full AI. Sure, it's challenging, but it's not the game itself that requires a lot of "thinking", it requires a very agile robot which is a challenging task mechanically. Building a soccer playing robot team requires a wide mix of skills which makes it a nice fun challenge for a team of students.
Of course the first step is using tiny little robots with small fields and simplified rules. However, the realtime requirements and the nearly endless possibilities in every single moment make this a challenge much closer to autonomous driving than chess or Go. Playing soccer on the level of human players is of course a mechanical/robotic problem as well and by simplifying the robots, playing environment and rules, the problem might be diminished to something than can be solved by an algorithm. However, the final goal of Robocup is to develop a team of independent robots than can beat the human world champion team.
Actually, probably nobody can tell if this can still be done by algorithms but I kinda doubt it. Still, a soccer game is of course a very well defined challenge in a confined space with clear rules and therefore much less complex than autonomous driving in a real world traffic scenario (rush hour in major city during a hailstorm with roadworks and what not).
No one is trying to make a full AI to drive cars (unless you listen to Musk).
Well, an artificial intelligence on the level of a human driver
is needed to cope with every possible situation in a realworld environment as good as a human driver. IMHO, whoever denies this, underestimates the complexity.
Having a self-aware AI in every car would be crazy and unethical, no one is anywhere near creating full AI.
Self-awareness is a totally different issue. Of course, at this point, I guess nobody on this planet could answer if achieving true AI is even possible without self awareness or not. Besides, there is no black and white about self-awareness. Also animals have different levels of self-awareness. Then again, it's actually pretty hard to prove self-awareness. You could easily program a robot or program to pretend self-awareness but it would be incredibly hard to prove if a black box AI is fully self aware or just pretends to be.
Self driving cars will not be AI, it will be dumb machines that can solve most driving problems autonomously.
Nah, this will never work reliably in the real world. It will work though in a restricted environment but that just doesn't really help for true autonomous driving.
There will be some driving tasks humans can handle better, but there will be other driving tasks that self driving cars handle better. And it's not about who's best, it's about getting the self driving car "good enough" so that it can be trusted on public roads. (Well, one explicitly stated goal is to reduce traffic accident rates, so they will have to be a lot better in that regard.)
A dumb machine will never be good enough to be entrusted with people'e lives on public roads.