Tesla FSD Assertive mode rolling stops
Occurred: October 2021
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Tesla's 'Full-Self-driving' beta test has an 'Assertive' mode that may perform rolling stops, according to The Verge. Rolling stops are generally considered illegal under US law.
One of three 'profiles' - 'Chill', 'Average' and 'Assertive' - that dictates how a car will behave in certain circumstances, the latter will 'have a smaller follow distance, perform more frequent speed lane changes, will not exit passing lanes and may perform more rolling stops'.
FSD profiles were included in Tesla's October 2021 10.3.1 update. The previous update had been pulled two days after testers complained about false crash warnings and other bugs.
Following meetings with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Tesla recalled (pdf) all 53,822 Model S, X, 3 and Y vehicles with the FSD feature, and says it will disable the rolling stop function.
Operator: Tesla
Developer: Tesla
Country: USA
Sector: Automotive
Purpose: Control car behaviours
Technology: Self-driving system; Computer vision
Issue: Safety; Legal - compliance; Ethics
Transparency: Black box
System
Legal, regulatory
News, commentary, analysis
https://www.theverge.com/2022/1/9/22875382/tesla-full-self-driving-beta-assertive-profile
https://gizmodo.com/teslas-assertive-mode-brings-rolling-stops-to-self-driv-1848331537
https://hypebeast.com/2022/1/tesla-full-self-driving-beta-assertive-mode-perform-rolling-stops
https://jalopnik.com/teslas-fsd-betas-driving-modes-bring-up-interesting-eth-1848331683
https://news.yahoo.com/tesla-could-drive-jerk-110039153.html
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/02/01/cars/tesla-fsd-stop-sign/index.html
Page info
Type: Incident
Published: January 2022