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by whatsreal
1877 days ago
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I am torn by this. On the one hand a weighted chain and buckled seat belt is a simple hack. On the other hand it is clear that they were intentionally attempting to get around Tesla's safeguards. I fail to see how this is the company's fault. What could Tesla possibly do to provide more safegaurds? Measure resistance on the steering wheel to prove it is flesh on there? Driver-facing camera? Weight sensor in the seat? Each of these has their own issues including defeatability and privacy invasions. Anything can be defeated eventually. However any attempts to be defeated should automatically put the liability on the person making that attempt. Example: It is not Samsung's fault if I intentionally disable safeguards and over charge my battery causing a fire or explosion. |
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Because other companies do it better. Tesla likes to publicly position its driver assistance as being so good that they refer to it as "Full Self Driving", and yet the system doesn't include a number of basic safety measures. That's part of the reason why they tell regulators that "Full Self Driving" is only a level 2 system:
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/39647/tesla-admits-current-ful...
> Measure resistance on the steering wheel to prove it is flesh on there? Driver-facing camera? Weight sensor in the seat?
Yep.
> Each of these has their own issues including defeatability and privacy invasions.
Tesla cars in general are privacy invasions. For example, a recent car crash resulted in Musk tweeting about what Tesla's logs supposedly reveal about the car before it crashed. Tesla is quite happy to rummage through your data and use it to protect themselves. In this case it earned Tesla a search warrant:
https://www.thedrive.com/tech/40250/elon-musk-denies-autopil...