Tesla CEO ‘Quite Confident’ of Achieving ‘Human-Level’ Autonomous Cars With Current Hardware
Tesla CEO Elon Musk is “quite confident” his company can achieve full “human-level autonomy” in self-driving cars with Autopilot “computing hardware,” he said on a Wednesday earnings call. The question is “what will be acceptable to regulators?” he said. “Regulators may require some significant margin above human capability in order for a full autonomy to be engaged,” said Musk. “They may say, ‘It needs to be 50 percent safer, 100 percent safer, 1,000 percent safer,’ I don't know. I'm not sure they know, either.” Tesla will have “more to say on the hardware front soon, we're just not ready to say anything now,” he said. “But I feel very optimistic on that front.” A truck driver’s failure to yield the right of way and the “inattention” of the Tesla Model S driver “due to overreliance on vehicle automation” in the car's Autopilot mode were the “probable cause” of a 2016 crash near Williston, Florida, that killed the Tesla driver, the National Transportation Safety Board reported (see 1709120050).