Global Times - Weekend

Tesla under probe over game feature

- Reuters

US they auto have safety opened regulators a formal said safety investigat­ion into 580,000 Tesla vehicles sold since 2017 over the automaker’s decision to allow games to be played on the front center touchscree­n.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA) said its preliminar­y evaluation covers various 2017-2022 Tesla Model 3, S, X, and Y vehicles. This functional­ity, referred to as “Passenger Play,” “may distract the driver and increase the risk of a crash,” the agency said.

NHTSA said it has “confirmed that this capability has been available since December 2020 in Tesla ‘Passenger Play’-equipped vehicles.” Before then, the game feature “was enabled only when the vehicle was in Park.”

NHTSA said in a statement that it was “committed to ensuring the highest hest safety standards on the nation’s ion’s roadways.”

The agency said

the decision to open en the investigat­ion was based on reports “Tesla’s gameplay functional­ity is visible from the driver’s seat and can be enabled while driving the vehicle.” The Governors Highway Safety Associatio­n said on Wednesday it was pleased with NHTSA’s Tesla safety investigat­ion “and want to remind all drivers to be alert and focused on the road when you’re behind the wheel.” Tesla did not immediatel­y comment. NHTSA said it would “evaluate aspects of the feature, including the frequency and use scenarios of Tesla ‘Passenger Play’.” Earlier this month, the New York Times highlighte­d the game feature, prompting NHTSA to say it was in discussion­s with Tesla about its concerns. The agency noted earlier in December that distracted driving accounts for a significan­t number of US road deaths – 3,142 in 2019 alone.

Safety advocates have said official figures underestim­ate the problem because not all drivers involved in crashes later admit they were distracted.

The Times said the Tesla update added three games – Solitaire, a jet fighter and conquest strategy scenario – and said that vehicles have warnings reading: “Playing while the car is in motion is only for passengers.”

The paper said the game feature asks for confirmati­on that the player is a passenger, though a driver could still play simply by pressing a button.

In 2013, NHTSA issued guidelines to encourage automakers “to factor safety and driver distractio­n-prevention into their designs and adoption of infotainme­nt devices in vehicles.”

The guidelines “recommend that in-vehicle devices be designed so that they cannot be used by the driver to perform inherently distractin­g secondary tasks while driving,” the agency said.

The agency in August opened a safety investigat­ion into 765,000 Tesla vehicles over its driver-assistance system Autopilot after a series of crashes involving the system and parked emergency vehicles.

A preliminar­y evaluation is a first step before NHTSA decides whether to upgrade a probe to an engineerin­g analysis, which must happen before the agency can demand a recall.

NHTSA said it received a complaint in November about the game feature from a Tesla Model 3 driver in Oregon, who said: “Creating a dangerous distractio­n for the driver is recklessly negligent.”

On November 29, Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz recalled 227 US vehicles – 2021 model year S580, 2022 EQS450, EQS580, and S500 – because the vehicle infotainme­nt systems “might allow activation of the television and internet display while driving, causing a distractio­n for the driver.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ??
Photo: AFP

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