Cruise is fixing the way its driverless vehicles respond to an accident with a software update.
General Motors recalled 950 of its Cruise robotaxis on Wednesday after a pedestrian was dragged under the vehicle in San Francisco last month. The company said the recall was “voluntary” and would include a software update to its autonomous vehicles’ post-collision response.
“Although we determined that a similar collision with a risk of serious injury could have recurred every 10 million - 100 million miles of driving on average prior to the software update, we strive to continually improve and to make these events even rarer,” Cruise said in its press release. “As our software improves, it is likely we will file additional recalls to inform both NHTSA and the public of updates to enhance safety across our fleet.
Singapore Latest News, Singapore Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
GM's Cruise is recalling 950 robotaxis after pedestrian collisionGM owned Cruise recalls 950 robotaxis after pedestrian collision
Read more »
GM's Cruise is recalling 950 robotaxis after pedestrian collisionGM owned Cruise recalls 950 robotaxis after pedestrian collision
Read more »
GM’s Cruise recalls 950 robotaxis after pedestrian collisionCruise, the autonomous vehicle venture owned by General Motors, has issued a recall effecting 950 of its robotaxis following a pedestrian collision in San Francisco last month.
Read more »
General Motors GM recalls Cruise driverless cars following accident involving pedestrianGeneral Motors GM recalls Cruise driverless cars following accident involving pedestrian
Read more »
GM Halts Production Of Cruise Origin RobotaxisClean Tech News & Views: EVs, Solar Energy, Batteries
Read more »
Cruise confirms robotaxis rely on human assistance every four to five milesCruise recently took the drastic move of grounding all of its driverless operations following a collision that injured a pedestrian in San Francisco.
Read more »