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Tesla tells regulator that full self-driving cars may not be achieved by year-end

Stock Markets May 07, 2021 01:30AM ET
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2/2 © Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A Tesla logo is pictured on a car in the rain in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., May 5, 2021. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri 2/2
 
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By Hyunjoo Jin

BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA (Reuters) - Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc told a California regulator that it may not achieve full self-driving technology by the end of this year, a memo by the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) showed.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said during an earnings conference call in January that he was "highly confident the car will be able to drive itself with reliability in excess of human this year."

Tesla has also rolled out what it describes as a "beta" version of its "full self-driving" (FSD) program to a limited number of employees and customers since October, and Musk has touted the capability on Twitter.

"Elon's tweet does not match engineering reality per CJ. Tesla is at Level 2 currently," the California DMV said in a memo about its March 9 conference call with Tesla representatives, including autopilot engineer CJ Moore. Level 2 technology refers to a semi-automated driving system, which requires supervision by a human driver.

The memo was released by legal transparency group PlainSite, which obtained it under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

"Tesla indicated that Elon is extrapolating on the rates of improvement when speaking about L5 capabilities. Tesla couldn’t say if the rate of improvement would make it to L5 by end of calendar year," the memo said, referring to level 5 full autonomous technology.

The California DMV, Tesla and Moore were not immediately available for comment.

"Tesla indicated that they are still firmly in L2," California DMV said in the memo. "As Tesla is aware, the public’s misunderstanding about the limits of the technology and its misuse can have tragic consequences."

The California Highway Patrol is investigating why a Tesla vehicle crashed into an overturned truck on a highway near Fontana, California, on Wednesday, killing the Tesla’s driver. The patrol did not say whether the Tesla was operating on Autopilot or not.

Federal highway safety regulators are investigating more than 20 accidents involving Tesla vehicles.

Tesla tells regulator that full self-driving cars may not be achieved by year-end
 

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Comments (3)
Ron Love
Ron Love May 07, 2021 9:11AM ET
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“Highly confident” and “may not” statements can co-exist. This isnt news.
Anders Nordström
Anders Nordström May 07, 2021 12:28AM ET
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Teslas selfdriving technology ranked last of the major developers. Beaten by Waymo, Ford, Baidu, Daimler among many...https://guidehouseinsights.com/reports/guidehouse-insights-leaderboard-automated-driving-systems
Ron Love
Ron Love May 07, 2021 12:28AM ET
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Waymo is nothing like Tesla’s FSD. Waymo operates on a pre-programmed path, Tesla is developing a FSD that operates like the human brain (vision + neural network). A Tesla FSD will be able to operate on any road of Earth. Apples to oranges.
Steven Jacobs
Steven Jacobs May 07, 2021 12:09AM ET
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Has any other car company come close to FSD? Exactly. So back off of TSLA with your Bearish attack
Fabrizio Fusaro
Fabrizio Fusaro May 07, 2021 12:09AM ET
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Has any other car company CEO announced taxi drivers out of the cars by 2020?
Wat The
WhatThe May 07, 2021 12:09AM ET
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@steve - people have died using the tech!!!!
 
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