
Tesla is recalling more than 50,000 cars in the US because the AI behind its self-driving feature acted too aggressively, rolling past stop signs rather than coming fully to a halt as required by law in many states.
The company鈥檚 Full Self-Driving code had been continuing through stop signs at up to 5.6 miles per hour.
The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) that are currently running firmware version 2020.40.4.10, which contains the 鈥渞olling stop鈥 feature. Tesla has agreed to disable it remotely on all affected cars, including its Model 3, Model S, Model X and Model Y.
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The rolling stop feature was introduced by Tesla in October, but the NHTSA says that failing to come to a complete stop 鈥渕ay increase the risk of collision鈥. A human driver failing to stop completely at stop signs can be given a ticket.
Tesla staff met the NHTSA on 10 and 19 January, before agreeing on 20 January to a recall in 鈥渆arly February鈥.
Despite the name of the Full Self-Driving feature, the company requires owners to watch at all times and be ready to step in and take control if the software acts dangerously. The code remains in beta, which means it is still undergoing testing, but more than 50,000 people are currently testing it, Tesla told investors last month 鈥 most of them in the US.
The news has prompted criticism from campaigners about the safety of autonomous cars. 鈥淥ur members are concerned that driverless cars and AI are being rolled out too quickly,鈥 says at UK transport safety charity RoadPeace. 鈥淲e鈥檇 urge a highly cautious and very gradual response.鈥
The UK Department for Transport didn鈥檛 respond to questions about autonomous car trials, and Tesla didn鈥檛 respond to a request for comment.
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