
"In April of 2019, a Tesla Model S with the Autopilot feature struck a parked car on the side of the road in Key Largo, Florida, killing one person standing beside it and injuring another. In August, a jury ruled that Tesla must pay $243 million in damages - a ruling handed down after, as Reuters reported, Tesla passed on settling the case for $60 million."
"The hacker, who goes by the alias @greentheonly on social media, was able to find the data in a chip taken from the Tesla.Once that data had been found, the Post reports, Tesla shared that it had also found that information on its own servers. An attorney for Tesla told the Post that the company had not intentionally suppressed the data, calling the situation "the most ridiculous perfect storm you've ever heard.""
In April 2019 a Tesla Model S operating with Autopilot struck a parked car in Key Largo, Florida, killing one person and injuring another. A jury later ordered Tesla to pay $243 million after the company declined a $60 million settlement offer. Plaintiffs worked with a self-described hacker who extracted data from a chip taken from the Tesla, and that data matched records Tesla had on its own servers. Tesla's attorney said the company did not intentionally suppress the data, calling the situation "the most ridiculous perfect storm you've ever heard." Tesla has appealed seeking reduced damages or a new trial.
Read at InsideHook
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