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[Auto] NHTSA Finds Teslas Deactivated Autopilot Seconds Before Crashes


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Autonomous Testing 2016 Tesla Model S self driving

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A NHTSA report on its investigation into crashes in which Tesla vehicles equipped with the automaker's Autopilot driver assistance feature hit stationary emergency vehicles has unearthed a troubling detail: In 16 of those crashes, "on average," Autopilot was running but "aborted vehicle control less than one second prior to the first impact."

That line will send Tesla skeptics into a tizzy, given how Tesla (well, its CEO, Elon Musk) has been suggesting that crashes involving Autopilot or its new (not-ready-for-prime-time) Full Self Driving "autonomous" driving feature are due to driver error or misuse. The obvious subtext is that Tesla seems to be blaming drivers despite, at least in these sixteen high-profile emergency vehicle crashesโ€”in which Teslas rammed into stopped emergency vehicles alongside roadways or in active lanes, incidents NHTSA found on average would have been identifiable by a human up to 8 seconds ahead of timeโ€”Autopilot was running but then shut off just a second before the impact.

Tin-foil-hat types are already claiming this indicates Tesla knowingly programs its Autopilot system to deactivate ahead of an impending, unavoidable impact so that data would show the driver was in control at the time of the crash, not Autopilot. So far, NHTSA's investigation hasn't uncovered (or publicized) any evidence that the Autopilot deactivations are nefarious; the intent is a mystery. From where we're sitting, it'd be fairly idiotic to knowingly program Autopilot to throw control back to a driver just before a crash in the hopes that black-box data would absolve Tesla's driver assistance feature of error. Why? Because no person could be reasonably expected to respond in that blink of an eye, and the data would show that the computers were assisting the driver up to that point of no return.

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Tesla Getty 2

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The NHTSA report also shows that "in the majority of incidents" among those 16 under close investigation, the Teslas activated their forward collision warnings and automated emergency braking systems, so it wasn't as though the drivers were given zero time to react, though it isn't mentioned how far in advance of impact those kicked on. In 11 of the crashes, none of the drivers took any action between two and five seconds before impact, indicating they, like Autopilot, didn't detect the impending collisions, either.

Regardless, those thinking the ghost in the machine punting control to hapless, inattentive drivers just before impact is indicative of Tesla trying to gin up a "blame-the-driver" defense need remember only one thing: Autopilot, despite its name, is a driver assistance feature. It is intended to be used with driver supervision, meaning the driver, who may not need to intervene with the system's operation of the accelerator, brakes, and steering nonetheless needs to be keeping an eye on the proceedings. In other words, even if Autopilot were programmed to sandbag drivers so Tesla could wash its hands of responsibility in the event of a system failure, the driver is supposed to be paying attention to what's in front of the vehicle. Even if Autopilot kept running all the way until impact, that'd still be the case, meaning Tesla could still in good faith blame the driver.

Of course, things aren't that simple. Tesla has repeatedly marketed Autopilot in such a way that suggests its capabilities are greater than they are, often by not correcting po[CENSORED]r thinking that the system truly is like a self-driving, well, autopilot feature. The company practically needed to be dragged into making driver prompts and safety blurbs noting how the driver needs to pay attention more visible inside their cars.

So, where does that leave the mysterious half-second-or-so Autopilot shutoff just before these crashes? In all likelihood, it's probably a simple protocol to shut off the system because a crash is about to occur. Plenty of new cars feature last-ditch shutoffs and other preemptive actions that occur just before or during impact; think about seatbelts that cinch up so occupants are seated more safely, or fuel-line disconnects, or some of the fancy new suspension actions Audi's A8 is capable of such as lifting one side of the car just before it's T-boned to place more of the crash structure in the path of the impact.

Absent any proof that Tesla hoped its Autopilot shutoffsโ€”which, by the way, aren't claimed to have occurred in every crash under investigationโ€”would let it claim, however incredulously, that the crashes were the drivers' faults because they were "in control" for the hummingbird-wingflap of an instance just before impact, there's no "there" there. Just speculation, and since Tesla has no public relations team or other way of answering journalists' questions (other than tweeting at Elon Musk), we won't know for sure until NHTSA gets to the bottom of things in its investigation, which has since expanded to include systems on over 2014-2022-model-year 800,000 Model S, Model 3, Model Y, and Model X vehicles. NHTSA says it will now report its investigation's findings on a monthly basis going forward, so we should find out more soon.

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