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Rizan Driving

Rizan driving is quite similar to driving in our world - one still has signs, lights, and markings they must obey to safely drive on the roads.  

Roads

The roads in Riza are made using sturdy digital panels that uses screens to create the image of road markings such as lines, arrows, and crosswalks. These panels are used to allow for the government to change the road marking when nessecary in the case of an emergency, blockage, or severe traffic. An additional benefit is that because these panels are digital, they are highly visible in the dark making driving at night much safer. Road signs function similarly.   These digitized crosswalks appear as green, blinking red, or solid red, indicating whether or not one may cross at any given time. Crosswalk lights are obselete and don't appear at most crosswalks. The ones that do rarely work.  

The Car Chip Act

The Car Chip Act of 2602 is an act proposed and passed by Oriane Garza during her second term as president. This act required that all road vehicals (including cars, trucks, bicycles, motorcycles, etc.) be fitted with an chip to be considered street legal.   Vehicals read all the chips of other vehicals within a certain vicinity and store the identification data which could be retrieved if needed for investigations, insurance, and so on. With these identification chips in all cars, license plates became unnessecary and as a result are no longer being produced.   These chips are required for self driving cars, which use the chip data of the cars around it as well as the road data to allow for safe driving.   These chips can also be accessed externally by certain groups such as @ARK, the government, and the police. By accessing these chips, one can manipulate a car or prevent it from working entirely. This is often used shortly after crimes in which a suspect attempts to escape inside a vehical, preventing a high speed car chase which can endager civilians. Car chips read the data of the person accessing them, creating a log of every external takeover that a chip has been used for.

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