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Self-driving Teslas can’t stop breaking laws and raise federal eyebrows, again

NHTSA’s probe could result into recalls, stricter rules, or FSD software makeovers, raising more troubles for Tesla.

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Tesla FSD in action.
Tesla FSD Tesla

What Happened: The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has launched an investigation into 2.88 million Tesla vehicles equipped with the company’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) system, following more than 50 reports of traffic-safety violations and multiple crashes, a Reuters report has revealed.

  • FSD — which is designed as a driver-assistance feature requiring human supervision — has been linked to incidents where vehicles ran red lights, changed lanes into oncoming traffic, or failed to obey road signals.
  • A report by The Washington Post has stated that the NHTSA is reviewing 58 complaints, including 14 crashes and 23 injuries, and is particularly concerned about six incidents where Teslas continued through red lights and collided with other vehicles. The agency is also looking into FSD behavior near railroad crossings after lawmakers highlighted several near-misses.
  • Tesla recently issued a software update to FSD. The investigation, described as a preliminary evaluation, is the first step that could eventually lead to a recall if regulators determine the system poses a safety risk. As an added blow, Tesla’s stock fell 2.1% following the news.

Why This Is Important: The probe signals intensified scrutiny of advanced driver-assistance systems amid growing concerns about the gap between automated driving features and fully autonomous vehicles.

  • Despite its name, Tesla’s FSD does not make a car fully self-driving, and the company warns that active driver supervision is required.
  • Bottom line, the “self-driving” features in some cars are repeatedly making dangerous mistakes on the road, and people are starting to ask if the technology was released too soon.
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Why should I care: If you’re a Tesla driver, you might be facing a recall or a software change that dials back your car’s abilities.

  • For everyone else, this is a stark reminder that you are still the driver. Don’t let fancy features lull you into a false sense of security.
  • How this investigation ends will help decide how safe our roads are for all of us as this technology becomes more common.

So, what’s next: Hold on tight is what we would say because NHTSA’s probe could escalate into recalls, stricter rules, or FSD software makeovers. Tesla may have to tame its “I know better” driving style fast. For owners, that could mean surprise updates, feature time-outs, or cars finally learning red means stop. Buckle up — the self-driving road’s about to get bumpy.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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