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The first car threw the pedestrian into path of the Cruise autonomous vehicle. After striking the pedestrian, the Cruise AV attempted to pull off to side of the road to avoid causing an obstruction.
Cruise, the embattled GM self-driving car subsidiary, is laying off 900 employees, or about 24% of its workforce, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. The layoffs are part of a plan to slash costs ...
And Cruise leadership is described as “fixated” on demonstrating to the media that it was a human-driven car, not its autonomous vehicle, that first struck the pedestrian. That “myopic focus ...
Workers have been remotely assisting Cruise cars every 2.5 to 5 miles in San Francisco, according to the outlet’s sources. In an email to SFGATE, Cruise spokesperson Navideh Forghani confirmed ...
The GM-owned driverless car company Cruise is under investigation by several federal agencies for an October crash that seriously injured a pedestrian. The company on Thursday said it is being ...
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Austin officials said residents complained about the cars not operating ...
A Cruise self-driving car seemed to block first responders during a mass shooting in San Francisco. Videos show the car stalling in the street as police shout for it to move. Cruise denied that ...
Hu estimates that the robot car blockade, which has not previously been reported, lasted at least 15 minutes. The June 28 outage wasn’t Cruise’s first. On the evening of May 18, the company ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- The driverless car company Cruise will pay a $500,000 fine after admitting it made a false report to influence a federal investigation. The Justice Department says Cruise ...
An incident that seriously injured a pedestrian in San Francisco led Cruise to take all of its cars off the road. The question now is when they will return. By Yiwen Lu Reporting from Warren ...