Safety concerns have prompted General Motors to scale back on its self-driving Cruise cars, following a robotaxi accident. This development comes after Tesla was found to have ignored autopilot defects leading to a fatal crash, raising serious questions about public trust in autonomous vehicles. Experts believe that increased transparency and stricter regulations could help restore this trust. The industry is facing additional challenges with key personnel leaving Cruise. Meanwhile, cars are increasingly becoming mobile computers, and digital car keys are emerging as the latest innovation.
Breaking News: General Motors will substantially lower spending on autonomous vehicle efforts after accidents with its Cruise self-driving taxis. https://t.co/UWbQ223WZ7
Key figures depart Cruise amid robotaxi incidents https://t.co/yFxN4y6KWd #RobotaxiIndustry #IoTJobs #AutonomousVehicles
BREAKING: General Motors said it will scale back ambitions for its self-driving Cruise cars after an accident involving one of its robotaxis last month. https://t.co/gp7Txc7k5B
General Motors said it will scale back ambitions for its self-driving Cruise cars after an accident involving one of its robotaxis last month https://t.co/NIu2KroSfU
Evidence shows Tesla, Elon Musk ignored autopilot defects that led to fatal crash, judge rules https://t.co/xTQa6aP1bC
Better transparency and tighter rules could improve public trust in self-driving cars amid safety concerns involving Cruise robotaxis, experts said. https://t.co/9nODWykCUc
Cars are becoming mobile computers 🚙 🛜 https://t.co/WzjJzqzOkF
How self-driving cars can gain the public's trust https://t.co/QOBNuwh3JB
Digital car keys are here. Are we ready? https://t.co/L8TkOAGrWT
Like human drivers, self-driving technology will never be perfect — but people could come to trust it more if they better understood its failings. https://t.co/AbexbXo2j2