Friday, November 22, 2024

U.S. opens investigation into 580,000 Tesla vehicles over game feature

Tesla’s decision to enable games to be played on the front center touchscreen prompted the US auto safety regulators to start a formal safety investigation into 580,000 Tesla vehicles delivered since 2017.

The preliminary assessment by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) covers various Tesla Model 3, S, X, and Y automobiles from 2017 to 2022. According to the commission, this feature, known as “Passenger Play,” “may distract the driver and raise the danger of a crash.”

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has said that it has “This feature has been accessible in Tesla ‘Passenger Play’-equipped automobiles since December 2020, according to Tesla. Previously, the gaming function was only available when the vehicle was in Park.” Tesla did not respond right away.

After a series of collisions involving the system and parked emergency vehicles, the government initiated a safety inquiry into 765,000 Tesla vehicles in August over its driver-assistance technology Autopilot.

A preliminary evaluation is the first stage before the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration decides whether to escalate a probe to an engineering analysis, which is required before the agency can demand a recall.

A Tesla Model 3 motorist in Oregon complained to the NHTSA in November about the game feature, saying: “Creating a harmful distraction for the driver is dangerously negligent.”

On Nov. 29, Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz recalled 227 U.S. vehicles – 2021 model year S580, 2022 EQS450, EQS580, and S500 — because the vehicle infotainment systems “might allow activation of the television and internet display while driving, causing a distraction for the driver.”

 

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