Tesla settles class action suit over Autopilot issues

Tesla has agreed a class action lawsuit settlement with Model S and Model X owners who claimed the Autopilot feature was dangerous and "essentially unusable." A district judge still has to rubber stamp the settlement, which was filed at San Jose federal court Thursday, Reuters reports.

Autopilot is said to increase safety through partial automation, though there have been a number of crashes. Two fatal collisions have occurred while Autopilot mode was on, along with a crash in which the driver said she was checking her phone while the feature was engaged. A report this month suggested Tesla omitted some Autopilot safeguards, including an eye-tracking feature to make sure drivers were paying attention, due to concerns over cost and effectiveness. Tesla, h owever, claims using Autopilot leads to 40 percent fewer crashes.

Six plaintiffs from across the US were named in the 2017 suit, and they accused Tesla of fraud by concealment. They also claimed Tesla violated unfair competition and consumer protection laws. The plaintiffs cited problems such as unexpected braking, and failing to break when approaching buses and trucks. Other features, such as side collision warnings and automatic high beams, were not reliable or simply didn't work, they said. The plaintiffs paid $5,000 each to have Autopilot installed in their Teslas.

A Tesla spokesperson said in a statement to The Verge the settlement was "the right thing to do." Tesla started rolling out Enhanced Autopilot hardware (for the second generation of the feature) in October 2016, though the company said it was taking longer than expected to release software updates. If the judge approves the deal, Tesla will pay up to $280 to those who bought or leased a Tesla with Enhanced Autopilot between October 2016 and September 2017.

Meanwhile, consumer advocacy groups this week urged the Federal Trade Commission to probe Tesla's use of the name "Autopilot" for the feature. The groups say the name is "deceptive and misleading."

Source: Reuters



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