NHTSA Adds 12th Crash To Tesla Investigation, Is Requesting An “Exhaustive” And “Sweeping” Amount Of Autopilot Data

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NHTSA Adds 12th Crash To Tesla Investigation, Is Requesting An “Exhaustive” And “Sweeping” Amount Of Autopilot Data

The NHTSA appears that it could be digging in with Tesla, especially in the wake of yet another Autopilot accident involving a first responder vehicle that we reported on just hours ago.

The regulatory agency, which announced a broad and formal investigation into the company’s Autopilot feature just days ago, has now added a 12th crash into the scope of its investigation, CNBC reported this week.

It is demanding that Tesla provide an “exhaustive” amount of data about Autopilot before October 22. Phil Koopman, a professor at Carnegie Mellon, characterized the regulator’s request for data as “really sweeping”. 

He continued: “This is an incredibly detailed request for huge amounts of data. But it is exactly the type of information that would be needed to dig in to whether Tesla vehicles are acceptably safe.”

The agency was likely prompted by a crash in Orlando days ago involving a Tesla that “narrowly” missed hitting a State Trooper. The Tesla driver had the Autopilot engaged during the accident, according to police.

The NHTSA recently said it had opened a formal investigation into the company’s Autopilot feature. It said it is opening a probe into Tesla’s Model X, S, and 3 for model years 2014-2021. The broad range of models and model years means that this could be the broad investigation that Tesla skeptics have been requesting for years. 

Even Tesla founder Elon Musk doubts Tesla’s “Full Self Driving” Beta version 9.2, calling it “actually not great” in a casual conversation on Twitter.

Opinions on some online forums as to whether or not Musk’s feet will finally be held to the fire differ. But we can’t help but think the unfortunate reality is that Musk will drag on the process and somehow wind up getting away with it, as he does, again…
 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 09/02/2021 – 13:19


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