Personally, I'm looking forward to even more of this stuff. I really just want a car that can drive itself. With an option for manual control, sure, when I want to have some fun behind the wheel, but otherwise I don't want to be bothered with it.
I'm still trying to figure out how the whole liability thing is going to work the first time someone in their Honda gets into an accident. "I wasn't driving, the car was!". That's one of the main things that's going to prevent self-driving cars from being a practical reality any time soon, even if it's technically feasible. The automakers know it too, which is why they're not the ones really pushing the technology beyond a bit of sponsorship.
Eh, in time they'll just record all the car's driving data onto a black box which will show whether it was a technological issue in the self-driving software or the owner at fault.
Besides, a few disclaimers about always maintaining due attention even when using driver's aids will probably sort it out.
We're so close to it being a reality at the moment (the tech side is basically done) that I think it's quite likely the legal aspects will get sorted out in due course. Might take a decade or two but it'll happen. The fuel efficiency and improved traffic flow arguments will eventually hold sway over the risks, I'm guessing.