How can this happen? I thought Teslas had all sorts of nanny state controls
How can this happen? I thought Teslas had all sorts of nanny state controls
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I can't find a news story on it. Looks like it was local to you.
Liberian flagged ship carrying Chinese EVs bound for Mexico - now on fire and abandoned
https://carbuzz.com/sailors-abandon-ev-car-carrier-from-china-after-fire-breaks-out/
The cargo ship called the Morning Midas left Yantai, China on May 26, 2025, headed for Lázaro Cárdenas in Mexico, scheduled to arrive by June 15th. However, the ship will likely no longer make that date, as it is now burning in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, said to be about 300 miles to the southwest of Adak, Alaska.
The U.S. Alaskan Coast Guard first publicly reported the incident online at around 2 AM on June 4th, 2025, when it claimed that the ship's crew was actively fighting the blaze. In a statement, ship manager Zodiac Maritime claimed the crew of 22 could not bring the blaze under control and were forced to safely evacuate by the U.S. Coast Guard to a standby merchant ship that responded to help. No injuries have been reported yet. Now, the USCG reports that a Coast Guard cutter is en route to assist, along with Coast Guard air power. There are reportedly at least three other vessels at the scene providing further assistance.
The Morning Midas is said to be holding around 3,000 new vehicles, about 800 of which are reportedly electric vehicles of some kind.
The only way they're gonna put that fire out is to sink the ship.
I see different colors of them daily
guessing you didn't watch
They should have at the very least stuck to keeping the sonar on those instead of trying to do a system that works purely of cameras, if you look at the amount of sensors the Waymo's have they can see 300 metres out 360 degrees and even those have been taken off the road and recalled.As Elon Musk touts robotaxis in Austin, federal regulators are investigating whether the system is dangerous even with a human behind the wheel.
By Dana Hull and Craig Trudell
June 4, 2025 at 10:00 AM UTC
The setting sun was blinding drivers on the Arizona interstate between Flagstaff and Phoenix in November 2023. Johna Story was traveling with her daughter and a co-worker in a black Toyota 4Runner around a curve that turned directly into the glaring sunlight. They pulled over to help direct traffic around two cars that had crashed.
Back before that curve, Karl Stock was behind the wheel of a red Tesla Model Y. He had engaged what the carmaker calls Full Self-Driving, or FSD — a partial-automation system Elon Musk had acknowledged 18 months earlier was a high-stakes work in progress.
In a few harrowing seconds, the system’s shortcomings were laid bare by a tragedy. The Tesla hit Story, a 71-year-old grandmother, at highway speed. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
Story’s death — one of 40,901 US traffic fatalities that year — was the first known pedestrian fatality linked to Tesla’s driving system, prompting an ongoing federal investigation into whether Full Self-Driving poses an unacceptable safety risk. Bloomberg News is publishing photos and partial footage of the crash, which was recorded by the Model Y and downloaded by police, for the first time after obtaining the images and video through a public-records request.
As the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration investigates whether Tesla’s human-supervised driving system is potentially defective, the company is proceeding with plans to deploy a small number of vehicles without anyone behind the wheel.
More at link
They’re still running all around the Phoenix area.They should have at the very least stuck to keeping the sonar on those instead of trying to do a system that works purely of cameras, if you look at the amount of sensors the Waymo's have they can see 300 metres out 360 degrees and even those have been taken off the road and recalled.
They should have at the very least stuck to keeping the sonar on those instead of trying to do a system that works purely of cameras, if you look at the amount of sensors the Waymo's have they can see 300 metres out 360 degrees and even those have been taken off the road and recalled.
I thought the new Teslas were more than just cameras?
They’re still running all around the Phoenix area.
The company said the automated driving software could fail to avoid a pole or similar object.
Thankfully there aren't many of those in close proximity to our highways and byways...![]()
