The news lately about Tesla, is like a broken record that has been repeating for a decade already:
One Tesla owner Italo Frigoli showed that the software failure was easily replicable. When NBC accompanied Frigoli to the same crossing where his car nearly plowed into a train over a month ago, FSD once again failed to recognize another oncoming train, forcing him to slam the brakes.
In a video shared by another Tesla owner, the car stops before a flashing railroad crossing. As the barrier arms lower, a traffic light at an intersection ahead turns green. The Tesla suddenly accelerates towards the tracks, nearly getting caught under the arm until the driver slams the brakes. Seconds later, a double decker train blasts through.
“FSD tries to kill me,” reads a caption in the video.
Can’t see pedestrians.
Can’t see other cars.
Can’t see trees and poles.
Can’t see lines or bollards.
Can’t see trucks.
Can’t see trains.
I mean, at this point in the 2025 story line of Tesla failure after fatality from failure, where are all the stories about why exactly anyone still has been allowed to operate a Tesla in public? When it is so obviously defective, where’s the analysis of the loophole that allows it to continue? That would be some news.