Opinion
Elon Musk moves goalpost again: admits Tesla needs 10 billion miles for ‘safe unsupervised’ FSD
This makes Musk’s latest admission incredibly strange. If the internal metric for true, safe, regulatory-grade autonomy is 10 billion miles, why on earth was the CEO promising it would launch last ...
As David Zipper explains in a piece for Fast Company, Teslas using the company’s most aggressive self-driving mode “will roll ...
A viral TikTok glamor video shot inside a Tesla has everything: lipstick, eyeliner, and lane changes, all handled hands-free. That’s the setup of a video where creator @she.sovay calmly applies a full ...
Full self-driving. Tesla’s astonishingly wild promise seems to have gone off the rails. It’s been nearly a decade since Tesla announced that all of its production vehicles would be capable of ...
Federal safety regulators are once again looking into Tesla’s self-driving mode, the latest in a seemingly endless stream of investigations into the safety of the technology. Last week, the National ...
Amid a slew of investigations into horrific accidents involving its Full Self-Driving software, Tesla has brought back its “Mad Max” mode that allows its self-driving cars to blow past the speed limit ...
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Tesla reintroduces 'Mad Max' self-driving mode set to ignore speed limits: 'The definition of reckless driving'
Tesla "loves to play with fire," as observed by Electrek in a new report about the electric vehicle manufacturer's reintroduction of a contentious feature, controversially dubbed "Mad Max mode." ...
Tesla has brought back a somewhat controversial self-driving mode that was removed several years ago. The mode, which is literally called "Mad Max," is more aggressive than the company's already ...
The Tesla CEO shared the update on X, saying the feature could show up within the next three to six months, but only if regulators in each region give the green light. He also emphasized that in-car ...
U.S. regulators are now looking into Tesla's new "Mad Max" self-driving mode, which allows vehicles to speed and swerve through traffic. Credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images Despite U.S.
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