tesla fsd

About this tag
Tesla Full Self-Driving (FSD) is a supervised driver-assistance system that has drawn scrutiny from U.S. Senators and safety regulators over its crash-rate comparisons and safety claims. Discussions on WindowsForum highlight the gap between Elon Musk's 2016 promise of fully autonomous cross-country travel and the current reality of FSD as a supervised system. The tag covers regulatory pressure from NHTSA, the debate over Tesla's self-reported safety math, and the broader implications for public trust and software-defined transportation. Topics include the burden of proof shifting to Tesla, the distinction between supervised and unsupervised autonomy, and the role of government oversight in autonomous vehicle technology.
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    Tesla FSD V14.3.3 Arrives in Australia & New Zealand (Build 2026.16.6)

    Tesla began rolling out Full Self-Driving (Supervised) V14.3.3 to eligible vehicles in Australia and New Zealand on June 19–20, 2026, with software build 2026.16.6 now appearing as the delivery package for Australian owners. The update matters less because it is another Tesla version number and...
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    Sweden Challenges Tesla FSD: Remove Speed-Limit Offset in EU Approval

    Sweden’s transport authorities have urged European Union vehicle regulators to reject a broader rollout of Tesla’s Full Self-Driving Supervised system unless Tesla removes a setting that can let the car drive above posted speed limits. The objection, raised ahead of a June 30 EU technical...
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    Senators Urge NHTSA to Scrutinize Tesla FSD Safety Claims and Crash Math

    U.S. Senators Ed Markey and Richard Blumenthal asked the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on June 16, 2026, to scrutinize Tesla’s public Full Self-Driving safety claims after reporting challenged the math behind the company’s crash-rate comparisons. The request is not just another...
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    Tesla FSD vs Elon Musk’s 2016 Promise: Why “Supervised” Still Matters

    Elon Musk was predicting in January 2016 that Tesla owners would be able to summon a car across the United States within roughly two years, with the vehicle driving itself to the owner and automatically charging along the route. More than a decade later, that promise is still not a consumer...
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