Tesla has announced a recall of approximately 239,000 vehicles due to a software issue that could cause the rearview camera ...
The agency has previously looked into other iterations of Tesla's Summon self-driving option.
Tesla owners can move cars equipped with Actually Smart Summon, but federal regulators plan to study the feature's safety.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has launched a probe of the "Actually Smart Summon" feature in Tesla ...
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced it is investigating nearly 2.6 million Tesla vehicles over a ...
The “Actually Smart Summon” feature enables drivers to remotely summon or move their vehicles to them or another location via ...
The original seatbelt rule, known as Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 208, or “Occupant crash protection,” has been ...
The 16 incidents span the use of Tesla's smart summon feature in the following models: 2020-2025 Model Ys, 2017-2025 Model 3s ...
A federal investigation has been launched into more than 2.5 million Tesla vehicles after reports of crashes involving a ...
Dozens of videos reportedly show Tesla vehicles colliding with other cars, parking signs, and walls while using a driverless ...
The company, in an announcement, is recalling around 239,000 units associated with a fault in the rear-view camera system.
An official report filed with NHTSA's Office of Defects Investigation alleges that a Tesla operating under the brand's app-based summoning command was involved in a crash, prompting the federal watchdog ...