As the federal oversight body winds down its multi-year assessment of Tesla’s touted Autopilot system, the road ahead for Elon Musk’s vision of self-driving technology remains clouded with uncertainty.
Snapshot:
The Key Player: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has spent years examining the ins and outs of Tesla’s driver-assist mechanisms, especially the famous Autopilot mode.
Current Status: According to Reuters, the verdict is almost here, and it’s bound to shape the landscape of autonomous driving.
Flashback: The inquiry took off in 2021, following multiple occurrences where Tesla cars, equipped with their driver support tools, collided with non-moving emergency vehicles.
Did You Know?
Although termed as “Autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving,” Tesla’s tools aren’t entirely hands-off. They are, in fact, designed to operate with human oversight, with the driver poised to jump in when required. The heart of the investigation? To determine if Tesla gave ample guidance to its drivers and how liable they are for the accidents.
Why the Buzz?
Elon Musk has frequently painted a picture suggesting Tesla cars are on the cutting edge of autonomous tech. Just a while ago, Musk chimed in on a post by Andrej Karpathy, a former bigwig in Tesla’s AI division, who was showing off the prowess of ChatGPT by OpenAI. Musk’s take? A comparison, exclaiming that many are equally unaware that cars (like Tesla’s) can “drive themselves”. Such remarks have only fueled debates on whether Tesla’s system might be misconstrued by users.