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Search resuls for: "Autosteer"


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New York CNN —Federal safety regulators said they are investigating whether Tesla’s massive recall in December of essentially all of its vehicles on US roads was sufficient to fix the safety threat posed by its “Autopilot” feature. The recall of 2 million Tesla vehicles was ordered by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration over a software update that is designed to limit the use of its Autopilot feature. The NHTSA said late Thursday that Tesla’s software update recall requires the owner to opt in and allows a driver to readily reverse it. The software update ordered in December was designed to give Tesla drivers more warnings when they are not paying attention to the road while using the Autopilot’s “Autosteer” function. After the recall, Tesla vehicles with Autosteer turned on were supposed to check on the driver’s attention level more routinely.
Persons: Tesla, Elon, Musk, Autosteer, ” Tesla Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal, National, Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA, CNN Locations: New York,
Federal authorities say a "critical safety gap" in Tesla 's Autopilot system contributed to at least 467 collisions, 13 resulting in fatalities and "many others" resulting in serious injuries. The findings come from a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration analysis of 956 crashes in which Tesla Autopilot was thought to have been in use. Tesla's Autopilot design has "led to foreseeable misuse and avoidable crashes," the NHTSA report said. The agency also said it was opening a new probe into the effectiveness of a software update Tesla previously issued as part of a recall in December. "People are dying due to misplaced confidence in Tesla Autopilot capabilities.
Persons: Tesla, Lars Moravy, Edward J, Markey, Richard Blumenthal, Conn, Walter Huang, Elon Musk, Musk, Philip Koopman, Koopman Organizations: Tesla, Traffic, NHTSA, CNBC, NBC News, Apple, Carnegie Mellon University Locations: U.S, Mountain View , California, Snohomish County , Washington, Sens
“Tesla has failed time and time again to address the failings in its defective self-driving software,” O’Dowd said Sunday in a statement. In a series of video tests by The Dawn Project, the cars run over a child-sized dummy on a school crosswalk and a fake baby in a stroller. The clips reportedly show two separate incidents involving Tesla cars with activated Autopilot features, according to The Dawn Project. The second ad alludes to an incident where “a self-driving Tesla blew past a stopped school bus,” injuring a child. According to O’Dowd, The Dawn Project set aside a bigger budget this year, anticipating they would purchase ad space in Sacramento.
Persons: Dan O’Dowd, Tesla, Elon, , “ Tesla, ” O’Dowd, Elon Musk, ” Tesa, “ It’s, O’Dowd, , we’re, Washington “, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden’s, Biden, Ramishah Maruf, Chris Isidore Organizations: New, New York CNN — Tech, Tesla, Dawn Project, CNN, Dawn, Green Hills Software, CBS Sacramento, CBS, Traffic Safety Administration, National Transportation Safety Board, NHTSA Locations: New York, Santa Barbara , California, Washington ,, Atlanta, Austin , Texas, Tallahassee , Florida, Albany , New York, Sacramento , California, Washington , DC, Dover , Delaware, Traverse City , Michigan, Sacramento, CBS Sacramento, Washington, Traverse City, Delaware, Wilmington , Delaware
Aerial view of Tesla vehicles waiting to be loaded on board a roll-on-roll-off cargo vessel at Nangang port on September 6, 2023 in Shanghai, China. Tesla is recalling more than 1.6 million cars in China to fix problems with Autopilot features and locks, state regulators announced Friday. Both issues can be repaired through a free over-the-air software update, so drivers do not have to take their vehicles anywhere, regulators said. Additionally, more than 7,500 Model S and Model X cars were recalled over concerns that, during a crash, the noncollision side door will unlock. The safety regulators recalled around 2 million Tesla cars after determining that some of the company's Autopilot features were confusing and too easy to misuse.
Persons: Tesla, Tesla's Organizations: Administration, Market, Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA, CNBC PRO Locations: Shanghai, China, China's, U.S
Tesla is recalling around 2 million of its vehicles in the U.S. to fix Autopilot features that auto safety regulators found to be confusing to drivers, or too easy for them to misuse and abuse. The NHTSA opened an investigation into 11 incidents involving Tesla cars where Autopilot and Autosteer were involved in 2021, a probe which ultimately led to today's voluntary recall. He hopes Tesla and NHTSA will pay special attention to roads with cross traffic, because there have been multiple fatal crashes with trucks in that situation involving Tesla vehicles with Autopilot engaged. If people need to steer, for instance, they must pay attention. The Autopilot system will still be helpful if it just does the accelerating and braking but people could not not pay attention."
Persons: Elon, Twitter —, Tesla, Autosteer, Philip Koopman, Koopman, hasn't, Erik Vinkhuyzen Organizations: SpaceX, Twitter, New York Times, National, Traffic, NHTSA, Federal Reserve, Carnegie Mellon University, CNBC, King's College London, CNBC PRO Locations: New York City, U.S
Tesla is recalling 362,758 vehicles equipped with the company's experimental driver-assistance software, which is marketed as Full Self-Driving Beta or FSD Beta, in the US, according to a recall notice out Thursday. The FSD Beta system may also have trouble responding appropriately "to changes in posted speed limits," the notice said. Tesla lets thousands of drivers try new and unfinished driver assistance features on public roads in the U.S. through FSD Beta. Owners must obtain a high driver-safety score, as determined by Tesla software that monitors their driving habits, and maintain it to get FSD Beta access. FSD Beta can best be summarized as a host of new features that are not yet fully debugged.
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