this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2025
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[–] SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I own a Tesla with FSD. This is not quite accurate. Tesla uses pressure in the steering wheel and a cabin camera to evaluate driver attentiveness. If you haven't applied pressure to the wheel in a while, there is a flashing blue warning on the screen. If you still don't apply pressure to the wheel, it beeps. If you still don't apply pressure to the wheel after the beep for a few seconds, you get a strike and it locks out for the rest of the drive. Or if you get repeated beeps on the same drive, like seven or eight, it locks out for the rest of the drive and you get a strike.
If you are looking away from the road for more than about 10 seconds, it beeps. Same as above, get seven or eight beeps on one drive and it locks out for the rest of the drive and you get a strike.
I believe it's currently at five strikes before FSD disables for 2 weeks. If you go for 2 weeks without getting a strike, one is removed.

The nag system is annoying. On the highway, it's very good, usually better than I am as a human. However even with the nags it is still a huge benefit, and I think it makes me safer because I am more of a supervisor than an operator and I can spend more of my attention looking out in other directions and keeping better situational awareness overall.

[–] brygphilomena@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 points 3 days ago (1 children)

That's... Still terrible, you see that, right? Disabling a feature that I've paid for for any reason, at all, is unacceptable.

The parenting behavior of big tech companies is insulting.

[–] SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today 1 points 1 day ago

In concept, as a partly libertarian, I agree, they should sell the hardware and what I do with it is my business and if I misuse it and get in an accident that is my fault not theirs.

In practice, most people don't see it that way unfortunately. There's an awful lot of people who already misuse autopilot, even going back to the early days of autopilot. And every time someone gets in a crash in a Tesla, the question becomes did autopilot kill them and can we blame Tesla for the crash.

Personally I wish more people took the absolute view, namely that it's supervised autopilot so either the human did something stupid or the computer did something stupid while the human was supposed to be watching it and either way it's the human's fault. Unfortunately this is not the world we live in :(

Point being, I would complain more about the parenting behavior of society at large than the parenting behavior of big tech.