| Cherry picking the one line that can be twisted like that is a bit silly don't you think? Let's start with this segment of the title: "Teslas Aren’t Safer On Autopilot" Then, further down: "Teslas are not safer with Autopilot on" "Of the 2.1M miles between accidents in manual mode, 840,000 would be on freeway and 1.26M off of it. For the 3.07M miles in autopilot, 2.9M would be on freeway and just 192,000 off of it. So the manual record is roughly one accident per 1.55M miles off-freeway and per 4.65M miles on-freeway. But the Autopilot record ballparks to 1.1M miles between accidents off freeway and 3.5M on-freeway. In other words, about 30% longer without an “accident” in manual (with forward collision avoidance on) or TACC than in Autopilot. Instead of being safer with Autopilot, it looks like a Tesla is slightly less safe. But not a lot less safe. And if the predicted 3:1 ratio of accidents freeeway to non-freeway is too high, it might even be about the same. But almost certainly not 1.5 times better as Tesla’s numbers imply." Which I think is a pretty fair and even handed evaluation of the available data. |
> Tesla (...) are doing much worse than those ordinary drivers.
That was response to:
> Those successfully tested ordinary drivers also kill many people every year.
The not-apples-to-apples comparison indicate that Tesla are twice less likely to cause accident/crash when on Autopilot, and even less when not on Autopilot.
I find it also highly likely that Autopilot slightly increases the chances of accident right now.