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Musk's Claims Challenged About Absence of Autopilot in Texas Tesla Crash (cnn.com) 205

"Despite early claims by #Tesla #ElonMusk, Autopilot WAS engaged in tragic crash in The Woodlands," tweeted U.S. Congressman Kevin Brady on Wednesday. (Adding "We need answers.")

But maybe it depends on how you define Autopilot. CNN reports: Tesla said Monday that one of Autopilot's features was active during the April 17 crash that killed two men in Spring, Texas....

Lars Moravy, Tesla's vice president of vehicle engineering, said on the company's earnings call Monday that Tesla's adaptive cruise control was engaged and accelerated to 30 mph before the car crashed. Autopilot is a suite of driver assistance features, including traffic-aware cruise control and Autosteer, according to Tesla's website... The North American owner's manuals for the Model 3, Model S and Model X, all describe traffic-aware cruise control as an Autopilot feature. Tesla's revelation may be at odds with the initial description of the crash from its CEO Elon Musk, who said two days after the crash that "data logs recovered so far show Autopilot was not enabled."

Alternately, Forbes suggests there may just be some confusion, noting that earnings call included descriptions of tests Tesla performed on one of their own cars after the accident. So when they said adaptive cruise control "only accelerated the car to 30mph [over] the distance before the car crashed," they could just have been referring to their own experiments. (Tesla also points out adaptive cruise control only engages when the driver is buckled — and disengages slowly if they're unbuckled — and after the Texas crash all seat belts were unbuckled.)

Why so much confusion? Part of the problem may be, as CNN points out, that Tesla "generally does not engage with the professional news media."

But The Drive shares another theory about the crash: A relative of the deceased told a local news station that the owner allegedly "may have hopped in the back seat after backing the car out of the driveway." Moments later, the car crashed when it failed to negotiate a turn at high speed.
CNN adds: Bryan Reimer, the associate director of the New England University Transportation Center at MIT, who studies driver assistance systems like Autopilot, said one of the plausible explanations for the crash is that the driver was confused and thought they had activated Autosteer, when only traffic-aware cruise control had been turned on. "The general understanding of Autopilot is that it's one feature, but in reality it is two things bolted together," said Reimer, referring to traffic-aware cruise control and Autosteer.
But according to the Washington Post, Tesla also disputes that theory: Tesla executives on Monday claimed a driver was behind the wheel at the time of a fatal crash that killed two in suburban Houston this month, contradicting local authorities who have previously said they were certain no one was in that seat. Tesla made the statement on its earnings call Monday... Lars Moravy, the company's vice president of vehicle engineering, said the steering wheel was "deformed," indicating a driver's presence at the time of the crash...

Mark Herman, constable for Harris County Precinct 4, told the station KHOU that police were "100 percent certain that no one was in the driver's seat."

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Musk's Claims Challenged About Absence of Autopilot in Texas Tesla Crash

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  • I have seen confusion in other forums (not computer related) about how a car that is self-driving could crash. Not many people understand that self-driving is not actually self-driving, you have to keep your hands on the wheel.

    • Re:Confusion (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Sunday May 02, 2021 @12:40AM (#61337506)

      These companies should not be able to use the words "Self Driving" or "Auto Pilot" because to a layman it means the vehicle can drive on its own.

      They should be using "Driver Assist(ance)" because that's all they're capable of.... assisting the driver.

      • These companies should not be able to use the words "Self Driving" or "Auto Pilot" because to a layman it means the vehicle can drive on its own.

        Self driving I agree with. Ask the common moron if he's ever seen plane on autopilot which didn't have a pilot in the cockpit. Hopefully they'll realise how silly they are.

        Or maybe you should complain to the airline industry since they are using the term autopilot incorrectly.

      • When I go to the self-service gas pumps no the gas will not go into my car automatically. What am I doing wrong?

      • Yes, I'm sure a clear and definitive use of terminology will solve the issue of basic human stupidity. You've really cracked the case, Ralph Nadler (sic).
    • by J-1000 ( 869558 )

      I have seen confusion in other forums (not computer related) about how a car that is self-driving could crash. Not many people understand that self-driving is not actually self-driving, you have to keep your hands on the wheel.

      I think (as the MIT guy from the article guessed) they could have just been confused by what mode they were in, considering that both modes are engaged by pulling the stalk. Once for adaptive cruise, twice for autopilot. I can see an older person messing this up easily.

      Think: how many time have you seen an older person mess up double-clicking on a computer? With a desktop icon there's a stark difference in outcome (one opens the app, one doesn't), but with Autopilot both "single click" and "double click" pe

      • There's a difference when autosteer is engaged though - you get an audio chime and a blue steering wheel icon appears on the display confirming that autosteer is engaged. Merely turning on the traffic-aware cruise control gives no chime, and only shows the speed at which you have TACC set.

        If the driver was competent in operating the vehicle in even the slightest bit, or really if any occupants of the vehicle were, it would have been obvious if autosteer was enabled or not.

    • Or Thing from the Addams Family.
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      I have seen confusion in other forums (not computer related) about how a car that is self-driving could crash. Not many people understand that self-driving is not actually self-driving

      Yeah. It's almost as if it were false advertising or something.

    • A. They haven't released full self driving yet
      B. When you enable the autosteer portion of the Autopilot software, there's a big thing you have to agree to that says you understand that you must pay attention and be able to take control of the vehicle on a moment's notice, and you are responsible for the safe operation of the vehicle. Until you agree, you cannot engage autosteer.

      I know you're going for snark, but I'm not sure why this isn't being treated exactly the same as someone who operates literally

  • by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Saturday May 01, 2021 @10:54PM (#61337410)
    Step 1: Idiots try to kill themselves by pressing "adaptive cruise control" then getting out of driver's seat
    Step 2: Idiots kill themselves thanks to step 1
    Step 3: Media gets ahold of story
    Step 4: Story is boring so media changes it to appear as shocking and controversial as possible
    Step 5: Success! The advertising dollars roll in

    Please adjust step one as needed, then apply all following steps to at least 10% of all stories that appear on /. and elsewhere.
    • Sounds like the woman driving an RV who set the cruise control and then went in the back to make some tea.

    • by J-1000 ( 869558 )

      Maybe I'm stereotyping, but the guys in the car were older. It's difficult to believe that a 59 and 69 year old were attempting childish stunts.

      Personally, I'm suspecting the simplest answer (as someone else mentioned): they crashed, then they moved to the back seat for some reason, possibly because the front doors wouldn't open. The car had just been wrapped around a tree, which could have partially crushed the doors.

      What also remains a possibility is confusion over Autopilot. Now that we know the adaptive

      • Personally, I'm suspecting the simplest answer (as someone else mentioned): they crashed, then they moved to the back seat for some reason, possibly because the front doors wouldn't open.

        And then they conveniently died, allegedly to keep the whole thing a secret.

      • Maybe I'm stereotyping, but the guys in the car were older. It's difficult to believe that a 59 and 69 year old were attempting childish stunts.

        "Here, hold my beer."

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by quall ( 1441799 )

      And CNN blames everyone's confusion and their own click-bait commentary on Tesla for not engaging with them. Incredible.

    • ...
      Step 2: Idiots kill themselves thanks to step 1
      ..
      Step 3: Media gets ahold of story
      Step 4: Story is boring so media changes it to appear as shocking and controversial as possible ..

      Not boring at all. I find any story about Darwin Award feats quite fascinating.

  • by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Saturday May 01, 2021 @11:06PM (#61337432)

    A person was actively driving, possibly without autopilot, and crashed. After the crash, his door wouldn't open, si he tried to exit by jumping to the rear seat.

    I don't know if something like this happened, but it appears to be plausible (unless both people were wearing their belts) and does not require an exchange explanation involving autopilot.

    • by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Sunday May 02, 2021 @12:49AM (#61337512)

      A person was actively driving, possibly without autopilot, and crashed. After the crash, his door wouldn't open, si he tried to exit by jumping to the rear seat.

      After crashing the car, the driver jumps into the back seat in an attempt to exit the vehicle because the driver's door wouldn't open. But instead of exiting, he buckled himself into the back seat? And while crawling into the backseat, he re-buckled the driver's seat too?

      Seriously?

      There were 2 people in the vehicle. Both of them were buckled in. And both of them died.

      • From Elon Musk Denies Autopilot Use In Fatal Tesla Crash Where Police Claim 'No One Was Driving' [slashdot.org]

        After a Tesla crash in The Woodlands killed two people last Saturday night, news reports were quick to jump to the conclusion that Autopilot (or even FSD) was being used and led to the strange crash, in which investigators reported nobody in the driver's seat, one victim buckled in in the front passenger seat, and the other buckled in behind them.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by gweihir ( 88907 )

          From Elon Musk Denies Autopilot Use In Fatal Tesla Crash Where Police Claim 'No One Was Driving' [slashdot.org]

          After a Tesla crash in The Woodlands killed two people last Saturday night, news reports were quick to jump to the conclusion that Autopilot (or even FSD) was being used and led to the strange crash, in which investigators reported nobody in the driver's seat, one victim buckled in in the front passenger seat, and the other buckled in behind them.

          And there we have it. The Tesla fanbois defending Musk are reaching the level of flat-earthers and anti-vaxxers here in their disconnect from reality. Some kind of automation was driving. And unless the Tesla design is fundamentally unsafe, the only thing that should be able to do it is the "autopilot". And that is really the only two options here: Either the "autopilot" killed these people or the technical failure was even worse.

          • Or the driver was piss drunk and ran into the woods to avoid a citation leaving his passengers to burn to death.
          • by quall ( 1441799 )

            Tesla said that the car didn't have FSD purchased (which is "auto-pilot"). They also outright said that Auto-pilot wasn't enabled, and only cruise-control was enabled. How could you come to the conclusion that auto-pilot had killed them? You were nice enough to bold out the line about being buckled, but ignored everything else. It's fairly reasonable to assume that the driver had turned on Cruise Control and then jumped into the passenger seat.

            And here you liken everyone else to "flat-Earthers" while claimi

      • Seriously?

        You'd be amazed at the things people have done in an attempt to blame their stupidity on others. I mean sure it fails Occam's Razor but this isn't without the realm of possibility, especially for someone who has already advertised themselves as quite likely being stupid.

      • by dalrun ( 980366 )
        From the summary (and included in many news reports) "after the Texas crash all seat belts were unbuckled"
    • by mbkennel ( 97636 )

      more plausible to me: a person was actively driving, and crashed. And intoxicated. After the crash, he bailed and didn't tell investigators or anybody else that he was ever in the car.

      • more plausible to me: a person was actively driving, and crashed. And intoxicated. After the crash, he bailed and didn't tell investigators or anybody else that he was ever in the car.

        Only 2 people ever got into the car according to a witness (who happens to be the brother-in-law of driver and car owner) and both he and the front passenger died... so no.

        From 'No One Was Driving the Car': 2 Dead After Fiery Tesla Crash [slashdot.org]

        KPRC 2 reporter Deven Clarke spoke to one man's brother-in-law who said he was taking the car out for a spin with his best friend, so there were just two in the vehicle.

      • by J-1000 ( 869558 )

        That person would likely be the owner of the car, making them an obvious suspect, and would be caught on the car's cameras fleeing the scene.

        • and would be caught on the car's cameras fleeing the scene.

          And the recording of that video would have gone up in smoke with the rest of the car.

    • So he jumped into the backseat, buckled himself in and proceeded to die? if you think that is plausible then perhaps this really was Darwin doing the world a favour if someone can be that moronic.
  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Saturday May 01, 2021 @11:08PM (#61337440)

    This is all Tesla's fault. If they weren't making cars nobody would crash in them.

    That's what the media craves. It is Tesla's -- no IT IS ELON MUSK'S FAULT! Why not just be honest about it? That's the conclusion they want from the start.

    Those guys went for a Darwin award and won it. And yet it is 100% guaranteed that here and everywhere we will have wags insisting that it is ELON MUSK'S FAULT because a) he made a mistake in some statement, b) he called it "Autopilot" and not something else, c) Tesla didn't make the safeties 1000% bullet-proof and unbreakable, or d) we just don't like him because we are jealous. Mostly d.

    Anyone besides me tired of it?

    • "Those guys went for a Darwin award and won it."

      Seriously? Darwin awards are for those who haven't spawned crotch-goblins, which at age 59 aand 69, it's more than likely they have.They are quite possibly grandparents.

      There is little chance of any Darwin award here - though you never know for sure.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      Those guys went for a Darwin award and won it.

      This.

      Whatever exactly they did, they circumvented several systems there to protect them. Oh, look! What a surprise! Computers do what you tell them to do once you've gone past the safety features.

      IMHO this is on level with someone complaining that after logging in as root and writing "rm -rf /" the system nuked itself and it's all Linus Torvald's fault...

      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        Those guys went for a Darwin award and won it.

        This.

        Whatever exactly they did, they circumvented several systems there to protect them. Oh, look! What a surprise! Computers do what you tell them to do once you've gone past the safety features.

        IMHO this is on level with someone complaining that after logging in as root and writing "rm -rf /" the system nuked itself and it's all Linus Torvald's fault...

        Is it? In that case you'll be able to give us all a forensic description of exactly what happened from the 59-year-old and the 69-year-old getting into the car to the impact.

        Off you go, the Internet has enough space for your most detailed breakdown of events and it will sure save the courts a lot of time.

    • Anyone besides me tired of it?

      *raiseshand*

    • by alexo ( 9335 )

      If some idiot puts a brick on the accelerator of his Honda Civic and climbs over the the back seat, surely it is Takahiro Hachigo's fault!

  • is as far as I feed the trolls.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Sunday May 02, 2021 @01:31AM (#61337552) Journal

    ... if there is not at least a certain minimum weight in the driver's seat, then the car should behave exactly as if the emergency brake were on. End of story.

    If a person somehow contrives a way to override this and gets the car to drive itself without anyone in the driver seat, perhaps by putting a weighted bag in the driver's seat so as to confuse the car's sensors to override the above policy, then they are provably at fault for deliberately creating a scenario that obviously falls outside of any reasonable protections that Tesla could have done to prevent it.

    • So what you are saying is that I should be able to slam on the breaks by lifting my butt off the seat.

      This is not how I expect the car to behave, and this is in fact an extremely bad expectation to have gotten wrong.
      • It's almost as if you missed the "...and disengages slowly" part of the summary.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        Again, that'd be your own problem. That is something you'd have to out of your way to do, and is distinctly more involved than simply pressing the brake as lifting your butt off the seat would require you to be pushing your feet against the floor anyways.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      We have something like that in Europe. If the car detects a certain amount of weight on a seat and the seatbelt isn't fastened it beeps at you. Mandated by law.

      It's kind of annoying when you want to use the passenger seat to carry moderately heavy stuff like a backpack. You can just do the seatbelt up to stop it.

      Tesla doesn't need any of that though, it has an internal camera pointed at the driver's seat. Nissan and Cadillac both have had them for years now, and they can detect if the driver is awake and lo

      • I don’t know if it’s the law or not, but our US 2011 Toyota Camry does the same beeping as you described, so I’d expect that it’s a fairly common feature here in the US as well (like you, I only ever hear it beep when transporting something heavy in the passenger seat, otherwise I probably wouldn’t even have been aware of it).

  • The cops are now claiming that a 30mph collision did that much damage to the vehicle? Someone is telling porkies...

  • CNN adds:
    Bryan Reimer, the associate director of the New England University Transportation Center at MIT, who studies driver assistance systems like Autopilot, said one of the plausible explanations for the crash is that the driver was confused and thought they had activated Autosteer, when only traffic-aware cruise control had been turned on. "The general understanding of Autopilot is that it's one feature, but in reality it is two things bolted together," said Reimer, referring to traffic-aware cruise control and Autosteer.

    But according to the Washington Post, Tesla also disputes that theory:
    Tesla executives on Monday claimed a driver was behind the wheel at the time of a fatal crash that killed two in suburban Houston this month, contradicting local authorities who have previously said they were certain no one was in that seat. Tesla made the statement on its earnings call Monday... Lars Moravy, the company's vice president of vehicle engineering, said the steering wheel was "deformed," indicating a driver's presence at the time of the crash...

    Mark Herman, constable for Harris County Precinct 4, told the station KHOU that police were "100 percent certain that no one was in the driver's seat."

    Nowhere in the bolded text does it say Tesla disputed Bryan Reimer's theory.

  • Elon and Tesla use literal wordsmithing a lot to justify their hype, smoke and mirrors. Perfect example was the P85D, touted by Elon as a "700hp car", officially listed by Tesla at 691hp, but it took two years for Tesla to admit that only the actual motors were capable of the advertised horsepower only if they were connected to a completely different batter and power delivery system (so a different car). Tesla's and Elon's official stance is that they only advertised motor horsepower, that they never said t

  • It is amply clear that Musk would like all the automated driving features on a Tesla to be much more powerful than they actually are. When they fail, he has a tendency to go into misdirection far enough that it is justified to call it lying (in the moral sense, not the legal one). This is not the first time this has happened.

  • tweeted U.S. Congressman Kevin Brady on Wednesday. (Adding "We need answers.")

    No, you don't need answers, you posturing, braying ass. You couldn't think your way out of a paper bag.

    No, I'm sorry. Go get 'em! With any luck, you and lawyers can delay lifesaving robo cars for another 20 years!

    • -1 Hubris

      We do need answers because knowing the capabilities and limits of these systems is what will make people confident both using them and sharing roads with users of the systems.

      What will certainly "delay robo-taxis 20 years" is overstating the capabilities of today's technology, making poor decisions based on that bad information, and killing a bunch of people

      This is a strange crash that generated a trivial amount of intrigue among a handful of people. Elon Musk tweeted about it and turned it

  • Tesla stans are unique...if you comment/criticize they claim FUD or you're Shorting it. No wonder Tesla doesn't have any professional PR folks...they don't need it. FUD and Shorts aside, I've read enough about the business practices to NOT give them 50-100k of my money. I like electric, and await a normal car in the 40-50k range with 300 miles not from Tesla.
  • Nothing needs to be invented here because the technology already exists. Ever try to drive an electric cart at Home Depot or Wal-mart? There's a switch in the seat that prevents it from moving unless your butt is in the seat.

  • It's all mute of the system was or was not activated as the driver was abusing the system, all blame is with the driver who should have stayed in his seat and watched the road with his hands on the steeringwheel, just as all owners are warned to do, even by the system itself. Why oh why are they trying to blame Tesla for what happened? I'm so fed up with a lot of people trying to put blame where it isn't. It's simple, driver was a moron, who tried to show off knowing very well the system was not meant for t
  • you can really tell the media owners don't like him, because every opportunity possible they come up with some bullshit...

  • What was the actual quote when the VP said that adaptive cruise control was engaged?

    Why is is so difficult include the quote in a news story?

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