By means of David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Nationwide Freeway Visitors Protection Management raised considerations about Tesla social media posts that recommended its Complete Self-Riding tool can be utilized as a robotaxi and does no longer want driving force consideration. NHTSA in October opened an investigation into 2.4 million Tesla cars with FSD tool after 4 reported collisions, together with a 2023 deadly crash, throughout prerequisites together with solar glare, fog, and airborne mud. In a Might 14 e-mail made public on Friday, NHTSA instructed Tesla its social media postings may inspire other people to look FSD as a robotaxi “quite than a partial automation/driving force lend a hand device that calls for continual consideration and intermittent intervention via the driving force.” NHTSA cited Tesla postings on X together with reposting the tale of a person who opted to make use of FSD to power him 13 miles (21 km) from his house to the emergency room throughout a center assault, at the side of every other depicting a 50-minute power house the usage of FSD from a wearing match. “We consider that Tesla’s postings war with its mentioned messaging that the driving force is to handle endured keep watch over over the dynamic riding job,” NHTSA wrote, asking Tesla to revisit its communications. Tesla, which met with the company in Might in regards to the social media posts, instructed NHTSA that its proprietor’s guide and somewhere else tells drivers that the automobile isn’t self sustaining and that they should stay vigilant. Tesla didn’t straight away touch upon Friday. Elon Musk is CEO of Tesla and owns X, the social media web site previously referred to as Twitter. NHTSA on Friday launched a letter dated Monday to Tesla in the hunt for solutions to questions in its investigation via Dec. 18, together with the driving force help device’s “possible failure to accomplish, together with detecting and responding correctly in particular eventualities the place there’s decreased roadway visibility that can restrict FSD’s skill to soundly perform.” NHTSA added that its “investigation will believe the adequacy of comments or data the device supplies to drivers to allow them to come to a decision in actual time when the potential of the device has been exceeded.” A 71-year-old lady who exited a automobile following a rear-end collision with two different cars used to be killed in Rimrock, Arizona when she used to be struck via a Tesla in FSD mode with a driving force fighting solar glare who used to be no longer charged. In December 2023, Tesla agreed to recall over 2 million cars within the U.S. to put in new safeguards in its Autopilot complicated driver-assistance device beneath force from NHTSA, which remains to be taking into consideration the adequacy of the safeguards. (Reporting via David Shepardson; modifying via Diane Craft and Invoice Berkrot)