"GM's Cruise Under Investigation for Robotaxi Pedestrian Incident and Leadership Issues"

TL;DR Summary
Cruise, the self-driving car subsidiary of General Motors, faced internet connectivity issues while trying to send a video of an incident in which one of its driverless cars dragged a pedestrian to regulators. A law firm's report concluded that Cruise failed to disclose all details to regulators and government officials, contributing to a culture of antagonism toward regulators. The incident led to the suspension of Cruise's license to operate in California, the resignation of several executives, and a pause in its driverless operations nationwide.
Topics:top-news#cruise#internet-connectivity#pedestrian-incident#regulatory-issues#self-driving-cars#technology
- Cruise wasn't hiding the pedestrian-dragging video from regulators — it just had bad internet The Verge
- Probe into GM's Cruise finds poor leadership, culture issues at center of accident response CNBC
- GM's Cruise Says U.S. Is Investigating Driverless Car's Collision With Pedestrian The Wall Street Journal
- GM Cruise robotaxi unit faces US probes over dragging incident, vows reforms Yahoo Finance
- Cruise "deeply remorseful" after scathing report on robotaxi pedestrian incident Axios
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