Tesla on self-driving mode causes eight-car pileup on San Francisco’s Bay Bridge in wild video

Driver claims Autopilot system caused car to brake suddenly

Josh Marcus
San Francisco
Tuesday 10 January 2023 15:53 EST
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Tesla autopilot system mistakes moon for traffic light, slowing car down

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Dramatic new footage shows an eight-car pile-up on San Francisco’s Bay Bridge last November that the driver claims was caused by Tesla’s Autopilot driver assist system.

In the clip, obtained via public records request by The Intercept, a white Tesla Model S can be seen pulling into the far-left lane of traffic on the busy bridge and quickly braking, causing multiple cars to crash in its wake, an accident that ultimately injured nine and sent a child to the hospital.

The driver told the California Highway Patrol (CHP) that their Tesla’s “full self-driving” mode was responsible for the Thanksgiving day crash. The feature had just rolled out in beta to North American Tesla drivers that month, which Tesla hailed as “a major milestone.”

The CHP has not confirmed whether that was the case and said Tesla would possess that information.

The Independent has contacted Tesla for comment on the footage.

Teslas with Autopilot warn drivers not to take their hands off the wheel, urging them, “Do not become complacent,” because, "It may do the wrong thing at the wrong time,” ZDNet reports.

The head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says the agency is “working really fast” on its probe of Tesla’s Autopilot system, which the NHTSA launched in August of 2021.

"We’re investing a lot of resources," NHTSA acting head Ann Carlson said on Monday, Reuters reports.

The NHTSA chief said it was paying particular attention to a 31 December tweet where Mr Musk suggested Tesla would update its software in January to eliminate the “steering wheel nag” for drivers who traveled over 10,000 miles on Tesla’s full self-driving mode, an automated alert that urges drivers to keep their hands on the wheel to confirm they are focused on the road.

Tesla’s self-driving technology was involved in 273 known crashes between July 2021 and June 2022, The Intercept reports, based on NHTSA data, and accounted for almost 70 per cent of 329 crashes and a majority of fatalities and serious injuries in crashes in which automated driving systems were involved.

Mr Musk has made the self-driving capabilities of Tesla’s a key selling point, describing last year how, “It’s really the difference between Tesla being worth a lot of money or worth basically zero.”

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