A New York Times Exposé Pulls Back the Curtain on Tesla’s Problematic Autopilot

Here are the biggest takeaways, from a staged video to accusations Elon Musk misled the public

Tesla CEO Elon Musk in Beijing, China promoting the launch of the first Autopilot features in October 2015.

Elon Musk in Beijing, China promoting the launch of the first Autopilot features in October 2015.

By Alex Lauer

There are no cars you can buy today that can fully drive themselves. Not even close. You may be confused about that, as Tesla vehicles have long featured a system called Autopilot and more recently offered something called “Full Self-Driving Capability.” Meanwhile in the fine print, Tesla says drivers should be keeping their hands on the steering wheel and be ready to take over at any time. 

It’s a classic case of CEO Elon Musk pushing legal boundaries while trying to cover his bases, but here, in the case of Tesla’s autonomous vehicle ambitions, it seems he may have gone too far. In August, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced an investigation into Tesla due to accidents involving Autopilot. Then this week, The New York Times published an exposé from Cade Metz and Neal E. Boudette showing a track record of Musk overlooking safety concerns and overstating Autopilot’s capabilities. 

The journalists spoke with a number of experts in the autonomous driving industry as well as 19 people who have worked on Autopilot over the last decade. Here are the biggest takeaways: 

This is an important story giving the public a look at what’s going on behind the scenes at Tesla, but you may not have heard about it until now, as Musk’s Monday interview with the Wall Street Journal has turned the conversation to more Tesla-friendly topics, such as him preferring the title “Technoking” to “CEO” and his concerns about human reproduction.

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