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467 crashes involving Autopilot resulting in 54 injuries and 14 deaths

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A concrete, high-profile example of AI safety failures in deployed autonomous vehicle systems, relevant to discussions of real-world AI risk, regulatory oversight, and the dangers of overstating AI capabilities.

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Importance: 52/100news articlenews

Summary

PBS NewsHour reports on a U.S. federal investigation into Tesla's Autopilot and Full Self-Driving systems following documentation of 467 crashes resulting in 54 injuries and 14 deaths. The probe highlights ongoing safety concerns with autonomous vehicle technology deployed at scale on public roads. This represents a significant regulatory response to real-world failures of AI-driven safety-critical systems.

Key Points

  • 467 crashes involving Tesla Autopilot/FSD were documented, resulting in 54 injuries and 14 deaths, prompting a federal investigation.
  • The U.S. government opened a formal probe into Tesla's so-called 'Full Self-Driving' technology amid mounting evidence of safety failures.
  • The case illustrates the gap between marketing claims ('Full Self-Driving') and actual system capabilities and reliability.
  • Real-world deployment of autonomous driving AI reveals robustness and generalization failures with serious physical consequences.
  • Regulatory scrutiny of AI safety-critical systems is increasing as deployment-phase failures accumulate at scale.

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 U.S. opens Tesla probe after more crashes involving its so-called full self-driving technology

 Economy 
 
 
 Oct 9, 2025 11:46 AM EDT
 
 
 
 
 WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal auto safety regulators have opened yet another investigation into Tesla's so-called full-self driving technology after dozens of incidents in which its vehicles ran red lights or drove on the wrong side of the road, sometimes crashing into other vehicles and injuring people.

 The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in a filing dated Tuesday that it has 58 incident reports of Tesla vehicles violating traffic safety laws while operating in full self-driving mode. In reports to regulators, many of the Tesla drivers said the cars gave them no warning about the unexpected behavior.

 READ MORE: Wall Street rises to more records as Tesla vrooms higher 

 In August, a Miami jury found that Tesla was partly responsible for a deadly 2019 crash in Florida involving its Autopilot driver assist technology — which is differen

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