Lodi News-Sentinel

Two die in driverless Tesla incident — where are regulators?

- Russ Mitchell

It’s a 21st century riddle: A car crashes, killing both occupants — but not the driver.

That’s what happened over the weekend in Houston, where a Tesla Model S slammed into a tree and killed the two men inside. According to police, one had been sitting in the front passenger seat, the other in the back of the car.

While investigat­ors have not said whether they believe Tesla’s Autopilot technology was steering, the men’s wives told local reporters the pair went out for a late-night drive Saturday after talking about the system.

Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk pushed back on speculatio­n but also asserted no conclusion, tweeting Monday that “Data logs recovered so far show Autopilot was not enabled.” The company has resisted sharing data logs for independen­t review without a legal order. Following Musk’s tweet, a county police official told Reuters that the department would serve a warrant for the data.

Autopilot technicall­y requires the human driver to pay full attention, but it’s easy to cheat the system, and the internet is rife videos of pranksters sitting in the back while a Tesla cruises down the highway with the driver seat empty.

It’s a state of affairs that leaves many auto safety experts and driverless technology advocates wondering just what it will take before regulators step in and put an end to the word games and rule-skirting that have allowed it to continue. Could the crash in Houston provide that impetus?

“I suspect there will be big fallout from this,” said Alain Kornhauser, head of the driverless car program at Princeton University.

Tesla’s Autopilot system has been involved in several fatal crashes since 2016, when a Florida man was decapitate­d as a Tesla on Autopilot drove him under the trailer of a semi truck. Less lethally, Teslas have slammed into the back of fire trucks, police cars and other vehicles stopped on highway lanes.

Yet little action has been taken by federal safety officials and none at all by the California Department of Motor Vehicles, which has allowed Tesla to test its autonomous technology on public roads without requiring that it conform to the rules that dozens of other autonomous tech companies are following.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion said Monday that it had dispatched a “Special Crash Investigat­ion team” to Texas. The agency, an arm of the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, said it “will take appropriat­e steps when we have more informatio­n.”

The agency declined to speak with The Times about what those steps might be. Since 2016, NHTSA has launched investigat­ions into at least 23 crashes involving Autopilot; but if they resulted in any conclusion or action, NHTSA hasn’t told the public about it.

Jason Levine, executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, thinks it’s about time that changes.

“There doesn’t seem to be much activity coming out of our federal safety administra­tion with respect to what is pretty evidently becoming a public danger,” he said. “You’ve got the market getting ahead of regulators, which isn’t uncommon, but this all didn’t start yesterday.”

Tesla sells an enhanced version of Autopilot called Full Self-Driving Capability for $10,000, although there is no car sold anywhere in the world today that is capable of full self-driving.

Although Tesla technology might well be safe when used as directed, Tesla’s marketing can lead people to believe the car is capable of autonomous driving. NHTSA, Levine points out, has rules against “predictabl­e abuse” in automotive technology.

“It is predictabl­e when you call something Autopilot it means autopilot, and when you call something Full Self-Driving it means full self-driving,” he said.

Incidents like the fatal Texas crash “are foreseeabl­e incidents,” Levine said, “no matter how many disclaimer­s Tesla lawyers decide to insert in fine print.”

Musk disbanded the company’s media relations department in 2019. Emails to the company were not returned.

The California DMV is in a position to clarify matters but thus far has not. In previously undisclose­d emails to the DMV in recent months, made public by the legal document transparen­cy organizati­on Plainsite, Tesla told the DMV that its system is not autonomous but a so-called Level 2 driver assist system.

The DMVs own regulation­s bar companies from advertisin­g sale or lease of a vehicle as autonomous if it “will likely induce a prudent person to believe a vehicle is autonomous.”

In public presentati­ons and slideshows, DMV Deputy Director Bernard Soriano described Level 4 automation, which requires no human driver, this way: “Full self-driving.”

In a lengthy emailed statement, the DMV suggested that it views what Tesla is selling as a non-autonomous system. It did not address questions about whether the company, in using the term Full SelfDrivin­g, is violating the regulation against misreprese­nting driving systems as autonomous.

Adding to the confusion, Musk himself has appeared on “60 Minutes” and Bloomberg TV behind the wheel of a Tesla with his hands in the air. He’s been talking about Tesla fully autonomous technology as if it’s imminent since 2016. That year, Tesla posted a video showing one of its cars running in autonomous mode through Palo Alto. “The person in the driver’s seat is only there for legal reasons,” the video said. The same year he announced a coast-tocoast test drive of an autonomous Tesla by the end of 2017, which as of April 2021 has not happened. He told a Shanghai conference in 2020 that the “basic functional­ity” for fully autonomous driving would be complete that year. It wasn’t. He said the company would have a million driverless robotaxis on the road by the end of 2020, which would cause Tesla cars to appreciate in value. So far there are none.

 ?? DREAMSTIME.COM ?? Tesla instructs drivers to keep hands on wheel when Autopilot and Full Self-Driving is engaged, but not all drivers do.
DREAMSTIME.COM Tesla instructs drivers to keep hands on wheel when Autopilot and Full Self-Driving is engaged, but not all drivers do.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States