
A California prankster has gone viral after sending 50 driverless Waymo vehicles down a dead-end street in San Francisco.
Riley Walz, a software engineer, announced that he was behind the stunt back in July, which caused the vehicle service to be shut down in the immediate area.
The 23-year-old has also been behind other viral pranks, according to reports, including the hacking of Vice President JD Vanceâs Spotify playlist and a website allowing San Francisco residents to track parking enforcement cops in real time.
âThe plan? At dusk, 50 people went to San Francisco’s longest dead-end street and all ordered a Waymo at the same time,â Walz wrote Tuesday on X. âThe world’s first: WAYMO DDOS.â
DDoS stands for âdistributed denial of serviceâ and refers to a type of cyberattack intending to overwhelm the normal traffic of a server, as was the case with Waymoâs network.
Walz wrote that he felt like he was âback in middle school,â and claimed that the stunt had been a source of hilarity to other drivers in the area.
âWe didn’t actually get in the cars. They left after about 10 min and charged a $5 no show fee,â he explained on social media.
âWaymo handled this well. I assume this isn’t much different than if a big concert had just ended. Eventually, they disabled all rides within a 2 block vicinity until the morning.â
He added: âEveryone was giddy, and when another car showed up there were cheers. Maybe 3 or 4 real drivers – all laughed and just drove around.â
The Independent has contacted Waymo for comment on the stunt.
The Waymo incident is not Walzâs first tech-based prank to cause a stir online. Last month he launched a website that allowed visitors to track the movements of parking attendants and their vehicles.
âI reverse engineered the San Francisco parking ticket system. I can see every ticket seconds after it’s written,â Walz wrote at the time. âSo I made a website. Find My Friends? AVOID THE PARKING COPS.â
The site was taken down by authorities after just four hours, though Walz later claimed he had found a âworkaroundâ to get it back online.