Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Hacker finds Tesla is working on a neighborhood-friendly Autopilot

Add as a preferred source on Google

Tesla’s Autopilot suite of semiautonomous technology is a work in progress, and the company is putting a lot of effort into making it better and smarter every year. Autopilot-equipped Tesla models are about to learn how to recognize stop signs and traffic lights, according to a hacker known as Green who cracks open the automaker’s secret files as a hobby.

Posting on Twitter, Green explained Tesla expanded its repertoire of 3D assets with a stop sign on a pole, and several traffic lights. If you need a brief refresher course, the 3D assets are used to show the driver what the car is doing while it’s traveling on Autopilot mode. For example, if your Model S is in a construction zone, the hardware that powers the system detects traffic cones, and the software displays them on the instrument cluster. The technology shows lane markings, too.

Recommended Videos

The 3D renderings are ways for Tesla to quell anxiety surrounding the use of semi-autonomous technology, like Autopilot. By seeing their surroundings on a screen, motorists know the car is perfectly aware of the environment it’s operating in, and it will behave accordingly. The software is capable of telling the difference between a pedestrian and an Audi RS 5.

While Tesla hasn’t commented on the report, Green’s findings suggest engineers are adding more functions to Autopilot in a bid to improve how it navigates urban environments. Making semiautonomous technology for highway use is relatively easy; the car needs to stay in its lane, it needs to maintain a constant speed, and it needs to brake when the vehicle in front of it slows down. It’s like combining lane-keeping assist, cruise control, and collision avoidance. Making it suitable for urban environments is more difficult, however, because intersections can be tricky to navigate, and a number of other factors come into play, like kids running across the road. Waymo has mostly figured it out, but it’s ahead of the pack.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
iOS 26.4 adds ChatGPT to you car’s infotainment screen
Apple's iOS 26.4 brings ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude to your car's screen, adds calming ambient music widgets, and previews the in-car video future that drivers have been waiting for.
CarPlay shown in March 2025.

Apple rolled out iOS 26.4 recently, and while your iPhone got several upgrades, CarPlay quietly had one of its best days in years. The latest iPhone updates bring two meaningful features that can change the way you use CarPlay on your car’s infotainment screen. 

Would you use ChatGPT while driving?

Read more
Sony and Honda’s electric car dream with Afeela series is officially dead 
Sony Honda Mobility has shelved the Afeela 1 and its follow-up, and the EV market has another high-profile casualty.
Machine, Wheel, Adult

Sony and Honda’s shared dream of launching an electric car has just come to an end. The joint venture between the two brands — Sony Honda Mobility — has just announced that plans for the upcoming Afeela 1 electric car have been shelved. Additionally, the follow-up model has been nixed from the roadmap. 

But why did the Afeela go?

Read more
This AI checks if your driving habits signal crash risk
Researchers say eye tracking, heart rate, and personality data can flag risk early.
Person, Wristwatch, Car

A new AI model is taking aim at a question most drivers don’t ask soon enough. How likely are you to crash before you even start the engine?

The system looks at how you behave behind the wheel, pulling in signals like eye movement, heart rate, and personality traits to flag warning patterns early. Instead of waiting for real-world mistakes, it relies on simulated driving tests to surface behaviors linked to dangerous outcomes.

Read more