Looming over Two Cases Threatening Musk's Tesla Is a Single Question: Can He Be Trusted?
MIAMI, FLORIDA AND OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, JUL 21 – Two lawsuits challenge Tesla's Autopilot claims after fatal crashes, with regulators seeking to suspend sales in California and Miami case set to continue for two weeks.
- Facing separate trials, Elon Musk fought court cases on opposite US coasts, raising questions about his trustworthiness.
- In California, a court filing claims Autopilot and Full Self-Driving feature names are misleading, after regulators sought regulatory action following this allegation.
- The trial, George McGee said `'I trusted the technology too much,'` and the case is expected to continue for two more weeks.
- A hit to its safety reputation threatens a driverless robotaxi rollout by next year, and regulators argue Tesla exaggerated Autopilot claims, risking legal and financial fallout.
- Legal filings suggest that California Department of Motor Vehicles is arguing before an administrative judge that Tesla misled drivers with Autopilot and Full Self-Driving features, indicating potential future regulatory penalties.
35 Articles
35 Articles
A demand from the Department of Motor Vehicles accuses Elon Musk's company of misleading consumers regarding the real driving autonomy offered by their cars
Two court cases against Elon Musk are putting Tesla’s self-driving tech in the spotlight, again
Elon Musk fought court cases on opposite coasts Monday, raising a question about the billionaire that could either speed his plan to put self-driving Teslas on U.S. roads or throw up a major roadblock: Can this wildly successful man who tends to exaggerate really be trusted?In Miami, a Tesla driver who has admitted he was wrong to reach for a dropped cell phone moments before a deadly accident, spoke of the danger of putting too much faith in Mu…
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