Workingman wrote:Really? So how come Bhavesh Patel was banned for 18 months and given 100 hours community service for doing it on the M1?
AP 1.0. It was rectified later. Now you can't do it. All Tesla vehicles get regular OTA updates which change things. This offense was in May 2017, the conviction was handed out 1 year later. Hardware 2 model S went into production in October 2016 and software to take advantage of it, plus Autopilot re-writes, came out in February and June 2017. Release was always on new vehicles, OTA came later.
Autopilot is now on Version 3 to leverage Hardware 3, which is a step change from hardware 2.5 (40 times faster).
This case you dug up bears no resemblance to the Autopilot currently operating on OTA updated vehicles.
Autopilot V7.1, released in 2015 has the following in the
release notes from Tesla.
Autosteer: New Safety Restriction
Autosteer is now restricted on residential roads and roads without a center
divider. When Autosteer is engaged on a restricted road, Model S’s speed will
be limited to the speed limit of the road plus an additional 5 mph (10 km/h).
When entering such a restricted road, Model S will reduce its speed if
necessary and will do so even if you increase the cruise control set speed.
So the vehicle which crashed was on a road without a centre divider, driving at extreme speed, when it crashed. As early as 2015 that was impossible with Autopilot as the vehicle would overrule the driver and slow down.
It is just possible that the owner of this vehicle had either bought one with 1.0 V7 software from 2015 or software which was hacked onto a rebuilt vehicle with OTA disabled. That would allow the driver to leave the seat, enable autosteer and tell the vehicle to exceed the speed at which the software was capable of operating. If that is true (but Tesla says they have the logs which say it is not), then it is hardly Tesla's fault. They have already found and fixed the errors which allowed people to be stupid. They sent out these software updates for free and ensured that every vehicle they could reach was updated with the safest software they have.
As for the final video? I didn't see it driving on city streets, on roads without centre dividers, nor in densely populated residential streets with children playing. Even then, it was operating in a mode which is around 25% of the latest software Tesla is doing on Beta. I have seen similar video's for FSD. It is like night an day, Autopilot is like a 1970's DOS computer compared to FSD as a full blown W10 monster. Yet, even today, Tesla maintains that so long as FSD is beta the driver must be attentive and aware whilst using it. Tesla has been using the driver facing camera to boot people off the Beta for flouting the rules.