Korean FTC Fines Tesla for Battery Fraud as Yet More of Its Cars Burst Into Fire

Korean news makes the Tesla seem like a Chinese made cruise missile was fired onto their busy roads.

Some 50 firefighters and 17 engines were mobilized and it took more than an hour to put out the flames.

That’s a LOT of wasted emergency response and environmental destruction for just one car.

It almost sounds like a plot from North Korea to destroy their enemy with Chinese cars made to explode by design, as I’ve said many times before since at least 2016.

Chinese artist rendering of the explosive Tesla remotely controlled…

The news even calls it “another Tesla caught fire” (via translation).

A driver was seriously injured when another Tesla caught fire in Sejong administrative city on Monday. According to firefighters, the EV burst into flames at around 10:30 p.m. Monday night when it crashed into a rail dividing a road in the northern part of the city and collided with an oncoming vehicle. The accident caused severe burns to the back and legs of the 36-year-old driver, who is being treated in hospital. 

And then they bury a lede.

Last Saturday, a Tesla Model X also caught a fire due to a battery-related abnormality in Seoul. 

In very related news (e.g. maximum mileage of a Tesla has decreased from 400km to 100km per charge due to engineering flaws), the Korean FTC early in 2022 told Tesla to stop blatantly lying about its battery safety.

Tesla very quietly edited its false and misleading content in response.

That didn’t go nearly far enough, apparently, as the FTC has hit the notoriously untrustworthy car maker with a sizeable fine for fraud.

The company made false and exaggerated claims about the distance its electric vehicles can drive per charge and the specifications of its supercharger, according to the FTC Tuesday. The antitrust agency added that Tesla made deceptive claims about cost savings for customers using its vehicles compared with gasoline cars. The FTC fined Tesla 2.85 billion won ($2.24 million) for the advertising violations and another 1 million won for not providing customers sufficient information on canceling orders.

Customers who discovered they had been misled and tried to cancel their orders were charged high exit fees. Tesla is obviously such a desperate and insecure brand, symptoms of fraud, nobody should go near them.

The problems with Tesla’s BMS are known to occur mainly in the 2018 to 2021 models, including the Model S, Model X, Model 3, and Model Y.

“Mainly”? That’s basically all the models you could buy. Korea also reports the car can burst into flames while in a Tesla service center!

…a Tesla recently went up in flames while it was being checked at a service center due to a battery problem. A large number of comments about Tesla battery problems have been posted on the website of the Automobile Recall Center at the Korean Automobile Testing & Research Institute (KATRI) since November last year.

For those paying attention, service center fires that destroy Teslas are not new.

Amsterdam firefighters in 2018 reported multiple Tesla were destroyed during service. One desperate owner used Twitter to try and find his $140k vehicle, but it was never to be seen again. All he recovered was his $1000 suit dumped by Tesla in a garbage bag.

Still a problem. And only a Tesla problem.

It seems like that one million won is far below what the fine should have been, especially since the entire EV market is directly harmed by Tesla’s barrage of falsehoods, poor engineering and life threatening entrapment.

Even more concerning is that the FTC admitted they lack appetite for regulation of bogus autonomous claims.

…FTC “concluded it’s difficult to conclude that consumer misconception related to autopilot violated the law,” said Nam Dong-il, director at the consumer policy division at the FTC, at a press briefing on Tuesday.

Wat.

That nonsense is definitely going to get Koreans killed, which is what I’ve been warning (again, since at least 2016). They could take a lesson or two from Japan, California and Germany on that front.

Come on Korea, you know what to do.

Ban Tesla on grounds of fraud, anti-competitive practices as well as national security risk. Literally any other EV is better and you know exactly why.

Total Tesla Fires as of 1/11/2023: 168 confirmed cases | Fatalities Involving a Tesla Car Fire Count: 50

Make that 170.

Tesla is banned on and around military bases in some countries for good reason.

Korea’s own car manufacturers are world leading innovators creating some of the best EV options on the market, precisely because they aren’t run with Pyongyang-levels of fraud like Tesla.

Kia had set a conservative 2021 sales goal of 13,000 per year yet received 21,016 preorders on its first day in South Korea. It quadrupled sales to 80,000 in 2022, with demand only increasing.

The Kia EV6, regarded by critics today as perhaps the best EV in the world, enjoys demand far higher than supply and certainly above targets. It’s high quality, innovative, plus a blast to drive (better performance and handling than Tesla). And it’s safe.

There’s really no good reason to allow deathtrap Chinese Teslas to operate on Korean public roads. And there are many reasons to ban them, not to mention send their CEO to jail.

And what people don’t understand there is that the competitors have been subsidizing Tesla. Basically, Tesla is getting paid for them not to develop EVs. So the idea that Tesla’s presence somehow forces everyone else to make EVs is really not true. It’s the opposite. Tesla’s maximizing those credits [with dangerous fraud and lies].

Major Biden Tech Win: John Deere Shifts to Support Right to Repair

The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) and John Deere have signed a short memorandum of understanding (MOU) about right to repair.

John Deere has reversed its earlier closed position and agreed to make resources available to farms and repair shops: software interfaces to onboard diagnostic systems as well as specialized hardware and physical tools

The timing is somewhat interesting. CES just displayed Deere’s new robotic tractors.

A tractor that not only thinks, it sees. A tractor that’s always ready to work, no matter how early or how late. A tractor that lets you and your operators tackle other jobs, while it does its job… by itself.

Still needs someone to do repairs.

A more likely factor in the announcement timing is the Biden executive order of 2021 (dead link, now here) that authorized the Federal Trade Commission to fight “unfair anticompetitive restrictions”.

John Deere probably just reset the clock for new FTC policy by signing a MOU, but that small step still counts as a win. Regulation has sparked innovation.

Did Security Boulevard Censor Gun Safety?

I am getting asked why this scraper link no longer works:

https://securityboulevard.com/2023/01/sig-sauer-hit-with-unprecedented-lawsuit-due-to-p320-firing-uncommanded-at-law-enforcement/

Unfortunately I don’t know.

I wasn’t notified when they scraped it from here; it’s news to me that they created one in the first place.

You’ll have to ask them when and why they took it down, instead of them giving me another “best of” award for generating traffic.

Related:

Germany Shuts Down Telegram… Forever

It’s being called an end of an era.

The era of the telegram came to an end in Germany with a final flourish of thousands of the once-popular message service, the country’s main postal service, Deutsche Post, said Wednesday.

Deutsche Post said that 3,228 telegrams were dispatched on the final day of service on New Year’s Eve.

Kinda curious if the last word someone paid to send was “stop”? The cost of operating and using it had gotten quite high.

It also never really shook a reputation for being monitored and intercepted.

The canonical example is when German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmermann sent the following encrypted text to Germany’s minister in Mexico on January 16, 1917.

Encrypted left. Decryption work right. Click to enlarge.

You may notice the telegram says “via Galveston” (Texas) but more importantly it routed through England. The British at the start of WWI severed cables connecting Germany to the world in order to intercept all its telegrams.

WWI map of global telegram cables. Source: BBC

The British delivered a decrypted version of Zimmerman’s telegram to the U.S. government on February 24. The text also was exposed by the press on March 1, raising public anger immediately about a German military alliance with Mexico and Japan carrying threats of invasion.

Public knowledge of these secret German plans was how the British government helped American public opinion overcome powerful leaders trying to aid Germany (i.e. Henry Ford) and shift the balance of power to better men.

Most notable, perhaps, was that former President Theodore Roosevelt along with the U.S. Army Chief of Staff (former commanding officer of the famous “Rough Riders”) had heavily promoted active response to aggression. Roosevelt objected since the start of WWI to America being passively in alignment with Germany, and objected even more in 1915 when “America First” became Wilson’s racist campaign for re-election (including a restart of the KKK).

Roosevelt instead campaigned for a civilian Preparedness Movement to ready America for defense of freedom.

1915 film “The Battle Cry of Peace” promoted by U.S. Army General Leonard Wood and former President Theodore Roosevelt

Basically, in the two years before the Zimmerman telegram exposed Wilson’s treachery, Americans had watched their President fraudulently blame “leftists” and “labor” for a growing “holocaust” of German attacks bombing cities, burning factories and sinking ships.

When a Preparedness Day parade was bombed by German military intelligence, for example, Wilson had for years before secretly been advised of this and related plots. On July 22, 1916 (just eight days before the infamous Black Tom explosion in NYC) a massive explosion rocked downtown San Francisco and killed 10 people.

Source: SFGate

Authorities under Wilson, despite strong counter intelligence, intentionally ignored their known and obvious German suspects and instead falsely used the violence as pretense to target “leftist organizers”. Today it’s known as a “one of America’s darkest miscarriages of justice”.

Think about the outrage then if Wilson had been caught enabling a foreign military to kill Americans so he could win elections (e.g. what Richard Nixon also did).

If that sounds like something the GOP still would do today, you know now exactly why Donald Trump calls himself America First when he invites Russian attacks and divisively blames “leftists” for everything. Separatist movements in 2016 America driven by foreign adversaries? Sounds like a memo straight out of 1916 Germany.

Public knowledge of secret German military plans abruptly destroyed best attempts by Henry Ford and Woodrow Wilson to side with the enemy of America. Note how California was labeled as property of Japan, an often overlooked detail that foreshadowed internment camps 30 years later.

After the British vociferously exposed the public to German secret communications, Wilson no longer could sustain such devious German alignment meant to fraudulently blame foreign military attacks killing Americans on domestic political opponents.

In April 1917 the unpopular U.S. President finally had his hands tied and Americans very quickly joined the war against Germany, with thanks to the leadership of Roosevelt and England, not to mention poets such as Alan Seeger (American soldier in Foreign Legion of France) who in 1916 wrote “I Have a Rendezvous with Death”.

I have a rendezvous with Death
At some disputed barricade,
When Spring comes back with rustling shade
And apple-blossoms fill the air—
I have a rendezvous with Death
When Spring brings back blue days and fair.

It may be he shall take my hand
And lead me into his dark land
And close my eyes and quench my breath—
It may be I shall pass him still.
I have a rendezvous with Death
On some scarred slope of battered hill,
When Spring comes round again this year
And the first meadow-flowers appear.

God knows ’twere better to be deep
Pillowed in silk and scented down,
Where Love throbs out in blissful sleep,
Pulse nigh to pulse, and breath to breath,
Where hushed awakenings are dear …
But I’ve a rendezvous with Death
At midnight in some flaming town,
When Spring trips north again this year,
And I to my pledged word am true,
I shall not fail that rendezvous.

Powerful stuff, and Roosevelt was a legend (pumping out preparedness books, movies, speeches), but nothing overcame Wilson’s secret executive alliances and elevated American public sentiment into active defense like that decrypted Zimmerman telegram.

Well done England.

Another interesting footnote is that the KKK had pushed for suffrage (white women voting) as a means to dilute Black votes, especially in “young” states like Montana.

This effect was seen clearly in 1917, after Germany had bombed major American cities, when Jeannette Rankin of Montana (first woman elected to Congress in her first term) voted against war authorization. Again in 1941, after Japan had bombed Pearl Harbor, Rankin voted against war (placing the only no vote). She expected America could align itself with Nazi Germany and Hitler.

Historians recently have pointed out something to better frame Rankin’s hard edge politics; “anti-labor” actions in 1917 were in fact planned attempts at ethnic cleansing or even genocide.

…after all of this research, the deportation was not a response to a labor action. It was that to a limited extent, but it was also in the nature of an ethnic cleansing.

Obviously she did not in any way represent Americans who weren’t white. She was especially toxic to Black women who had been rebuffed by racism of most white women’s organizations including Rankin’s suffrage groups.

Black women by comparison famously supported the war efforts and many served with distinction, despite attempts by Rankin’s carefully crafted role to erase them and their communities. This divide is what led into the tragic Red Summer and Wilson sending troops to massacre non-white Americans who had supported the war and even served in it.

Thus, one decrypted telegram from Germany also changed entirely the course of Civil Rights in America. Who knows what damage Rankin might have done if she hadn’t been exposed as part of American systemic racism.

The toxic America First platform in both WWI and WWII, a barely concealed front for the KKK, actively manipulated sentiment using highly targeted propaganda pushing white women to make their sons serve German interests instead. Obviously those efforts failed under the reality of German aggression that grew after WWI (modeling itself on Wilson and Ford), such that by WWII any mention of America First was labeled seditious.

Perhaps, with great subtlety, the fizzle and end of the historic German telegram thus signals something wider: the long overdue end to Wilson’s racist America First platform as well.