Cruise’s autonomous vehicles return to Phoenix—this time with safety drivers

Cruise is bringing supervised autonomous driving back to Phoenix this week, more than six months after the company pulled all of its self-driving cars off the road following regulatory scrutiny.

“Safety is the defining principle for everything we do and continues to guide our progress towards resuming driverless operations,” the company wrote in a blog post. Cruise plans to gradually expand to Arizona’s Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Tempe, Mesa, Gilbert and Chandler. It hasn’t given a timeline on returning to other states, such as California or Texas. It also is unclear when it will begin offering fully driverless rides again.

Cruise faced intense pressure last year after a number of incidents showed vehicles stopping suddenly or obstructing emergency responses in San Francisco. The city ordered Cruise to cut its fleet in half while it investigated. Cruise complied and kept operating until its response to an October crash came into view.

A car hit a woman in San Francisco and flung her into the path of a Cruise driverless vehicle. The autonomous car hit the woman, stopped, and then dragged her roughly 20 feet as it pulled to the curb. The California Department of Motor Vehicles suspended Cruise’s permit to operate its self-driving cars in the state, citing “an unreasonable risk to public safety.”

Since then, the General Motors-backed company has been on a mission to restore public trust. Cruise voluntarily pulled all its driverless operations across the country, hired outside law and engineering firms to review the situation, and implemented a leadership shakeup.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91124323/cruises-autonomous-vehicles-return-to-phoenix-this-time-with-safety-drivers?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 1y | 13.05.2024, 21:10:03


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

‘I legitimately smelled like onion’: TikTok users are ditching natural deodorant and going back to antiperspirant

It’s hot. Everyone is sweating, and anyone who chooses to venture into the world armed with nothing but natural deodorant knows they’re playing a risky game.

But online, the backlash aga

30.07.2025, 18:10:06 | Fast company - tech
This influencer is braving the brutal summer without A/C to help families pay electric bills

If you’ve been thanking the heavens for your A/C this week, spare a thought for Paul Farmer, who’s enduring the peak of Arizona’s summer without it—by choice.

Last year, Farmer went with

30.07.2025, 15:50:04 | Fast company - tech
Panasonic announces new CEO, a former Boeing executive

Japanese electronics and technology company Panasonic has chosen a new chief executive after eking out a 1.2% rise in its first quarter

30.07.2025, 15:50:03 | Fast company - tech
How Cloudflare declared war on AI scrapers

Cloudflare supports more than 20% of total internet traffic. The company recently made headlines with breakthrough technology that blocks

30.07.2025, 13:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Snowflake is betting big on agentic AI to transform enterprise data work

While much of the buzz about AI today revolves around flashy copilots

30.07.2025, 11:10:08 | Fast company - tech
The Trump administration might overhaul the U.S. patent system

Holding a patent could be a lot costlier for businesses and founders in the years to come. The Trump administration is reportedly considering a substantial change to the patent process, which woul

30.07.2025, 06:30:06 | Fast company - tech
The U.K.’s Online Safety Act has sparked an explosion in VPN downloads

It’s a tough time to be an adult online in the U.K. right now. Last week’s passage of the Online Safety Act, a law aimed at shielding children from inappropriate (read: adult) content, has b

29.07.2025, 18:50:11 | Fast company - tech