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Fortune
Fortune
Christiaan Hetzner

Musk halts rollout of Tesla’s self-driving tech until FSD software is fixed

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has more problems with FSD Beta. (Credit: Marlena Sloss—Bloomberg/Getty Images)

Tesla confirmed it has suspended deployment of its controversial Full Self-Driving technology that it sells for $15,000 pending the outcome of a recall. 

Elon Musk had been asked by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in mid-February to fix FSD software problems across 362,758 vehicles sold in the United States that could infringe upon local traffic laws and increase risk. 

“Until the software version containing the fix is available, we have paused the rollout of FSD Beta to all who have opted in, but have not yet received a software version containing FSD Beta,” it said in an undated statement

Tesla agreed with NHTSA to issue a voluntary recall, a confusing misnomer that suggests a nonmandatory physical return of vehicles to a mechanic. In reality, it simply means a regulatory procedure conducted by the company—but supervised by the federal agency—to enforce compliance that includes remotely issuing an over-the-air software patch.

Normally a voluntary recall would make it illegal to sell a car with FSD installed until the safety issue has been solved to NHTSA’s satisfaction, but the company lacks a public relations department and had not commented at the time of NHTSA’s announcement. 

Investor Day issues for Musk

The news comes just as Tesla is hosting its Investor Day on Wednesday, when it is expected to brief on a number of issues ranging from scaling up in size through a new affordable entry model to its fourth-generation FSD computer called Hardware 4 (HW4). 

A key issue likely to be discussed on Wednesday is whether in fact HW4 can be retrofitted to the existing Tesla fleet. 

At least 400,000 drivers in the U.S. and Canada have paid for FSD, a feature that is tied to the car and is forfeited upon sale of ownership. 

If Tesla cannot economically retrofit the cars with the latest hardware to fulfill its robo-taxi promise, it could face fresh fraud lawsuits.

Simultaneously, Musk has been flagging a new v11 of FSD Beta that would soon be deployed, unifying highway, urban, and parking lot driving into a so-called single software stack. 

This innovation, expected to act as a catalyst for quicker iterative improvements by removing complexity, has been promised to customers since July 2021.

Thanks to repeated missed deadlines, however, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak accused Elon Musk earlier this month of cheating his customers

“I’m really disappointed,” wrote Chuck Cook, a well-known Tesla FSD Beta tester, who is currently in transit to Austin for Investor Day. “Can anyone really read this and feel like we are where we thought we were?”

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