The Boston Globe

Tesla reviewed over monitoring

Musk’s tweet on disabling safety feature a concern

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — A tweet from Elon Musk indicating that Tesla might allow some owners who are testing a “Full Self-Driving” system to disable an alert that reminds them to keep their hands on the steering wheel has drawn attention from US safety regulators.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion says it asked Tesla for more informatio­n about the tweet. Last week, the agency said the issue is now part of a broader investigat­ion into at least 14 Teslas that have crashed into emergency vehicles while using the Autopilot driver assist system.

Since 2021, Tesla has been beta-testing “Full Self-Driving” using owners who haven’t been trained on the system but are actively monitored by the company. Earlier this year, Tesla said 160,000, roughly 15 percent of Teslas now on US roads, were participat­ing. A wider distributi­on of the software was to be rolled out late in 2022.

Despite the name, Tesla still says on its website that the cars can’t drive themselves. Teslas using “Full Self-Driving” can navigate roads themselves in many cases, but experts say the system can make mistakes. “We’re not saying it’s quite ready to have no one behind the wheel,” chief executive Musk said in October.

On New Year’s Eve, one of Musk’s most ardent fans posted on Twitter that drivers with more than 10,000 miles of “Full SelfDrivin­g” testing should have the option to turn off the “steering wheel nag,” an alert that tells drivers to keep hands on the wheel.

Musk replied: “Agreed, update coming in Jan.”

It’s not clear exactly what Tesla will do. But disabling a driver monitoring system on any vehicle that automates speed and steering would pose a danger to other drivers on the road, said Jake Fisher, senior director of auto testing for Consumer Reports.

“Using FSD beta, you’re kind of part of an experiment,” Fisher said. “The problem is the other road users adjacent to you haven’t signed up to be part of that experiment.”

Tesla didn’t respond to a message seeking comment about the tweet or its driver monitoring.

Auto safety advocates and government investigat­ors have long criticized Tesla’s monitoring system as inadequate. Three years ago, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board listed poor monitoring as a contributi­ng factor in a 2018 fatal Tesla crash in California. The board recommende­d a better system but said Tesla has not responded.

Tesla’s system measures torque on the steering wheel to try to ensure that drivers are paying attention. Many Teslas have cameras that monitor a driver’s gaze. But Fisher says those cameras aren’t infrared like those of some competitor­s’ driver assistance systems, so they can’t see at night or if a driver is wearing sunglasses.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion says it asked Tesla for more informatio­n about the tweet.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion says it asked Tesla for more informatio­n about the tweet.

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