Tesla's Full Self-Driving is switching to a subscription-only service
Briefly

Tesla's Full Self-Driving is switching to a subscription-only service
"Tesla will stop selling its $8,000 Full Self-Driving (FSD) option and make it strictly a monthly subscription service after February 14, CEO Elon Musk announced on his X platform. Musk didn't reveal the price or why he's making the switch, though FSD is already available by subscription for $99 per month or $999 per year. The shift could be advantageous for buyers, particularly if they decide to dump their new Tesla or trade it in."
"It will also allow prospective owners to hedge their bets, as Tesla has overpromised on the feature since it was first announced. Full Self-Driving has never done what the name suggests as humans must constantly supervise the system and frequently take control. Because of that, it's more of a "driver assist" system and doesn't even qualify as Level 3 self-driving (conditional automation), let alone as a truly autonomous Level 4 or Level 5 category."
"Musk has been touting self-driving capabilities on Tesla vehicles since 2015, promising at the time "complete autonomy" by 2018. Branding for the system as "Autopilot" and "Full Self-Driving" has been called out as false advertising by consumer watchdogs and government for years, but so far, regulators have yet to take action. A California judge recently ruled that Tesla used "deceptive language to market Autopilot and recommended suspending Tesla's sales in the state for 30 days."
Tesla will stop selling the $8,000 Full Self-Driving purchase option and make FSD available only via monthly subscription after February 14. The company did not disclose a new price for the subscription; FSD is currently offered at $99 per month or $999 per year. The change could benefit buyers at resale or trade-in and let prospective owners avoid buying an unproven feature. Full Self-Driving requires constant human supervision and frequent driver intervention, functioning as a driver-assist system rather than Level 3–5 autonomy. Branding has faced false-advertising criticisms, and a California judge recommended a 30-day sales suspension while giving Tesla 90 days to comply.
Read at www.engadget.com
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