News

Tesla is recruiting a motorist to test its driver-assistance technology in New York with an eye towards autonomous driving, ...
Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently announced the imminent launch of their robo-taxi service, set to compete with Alphabet's Waymo ...
John Krafcik told Business Insider he doesn't think Tesla has a robotaxi: "It's (rather obviously) not a robotaxi if there's an employee inside the car." ...
With Tesla beginning testing of its robotaxi service this summer near the company headquarters in Texas, the current leader ...
Tesla is recruiting robotaxi test drivers in NYC, and offering from $25.25 to $30.60 per hour — with a 10% bump for afternoon ...
Musk and Tesla have no ability to judge and predict the progress of their system, so that makes it a challenge to judge them ...
Tesla is reportedly looking for robotaxi employees in the New York City. Guggenheim still sees potential for a 50% crash in ...
Tesla shareholders sue over Robotaxi safety claims after Austin rollout chaos wipes $68B in value, adding to mounting legal trouble for Musk’s empire.
The EV industry saw major moves this week as Xiaomi's new model drew surging demand, Ford unveiled a universal EV platform, ...
Survey data shared exclusively with WIRED suggests that Tesla’s newest autonomous driving technology has freaked out some consumers.
The company has been running a limited pilot program in Austin since June, with safety monitors in self-driving vehicles.
Waymo’s robotaxis are fully driverless and expanding fast, while Tesla’s service is still limited and invite-only. The gap is bigger than you think.