12 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Autonomous Cars

Self-driving cars are finally here, and how they are deployed will change how we get around forever. From Tesla to Google to Uber to all the major automakers, we bring you complete coverage of the race to develop fully autonomous vehicles. This includes helpful explanations about the technology and policies that underpin the movement to build driverless cars.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Cruise on the chopping block.

General Motors’ willingness to lose a ton of money on self-driving cars is coming to an end, with the automaker planning to announce that it will slash spending on Cruise in a call on Wednesday. A pedestrian was seriously injured last month when a Cruise vehicle drug her 20 feet after a hit-and-run crash.

As I wrote last week, GM remained bullish on autonomous driving up until recently, even after its competitors reined in their own spending and scaled back their ambitions. Too bad it took a serious injury for GM to come to the same realization.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Cruise co-founder and CEO Kyle Vogt resigns.

His resignation follows an accident where a pedestrian who was struck by another vehicle became trapped underneath a Cruise robotaxi, which dragged her as it attempted to pull over. Rescuers needed to use the jaws of life to free her after Cruise disabled the vehicle.

The company recently announced one of GM’s lawyers would expand his role within Cruise. Then Motherboard reported Cruise’s first email to California’s DMV after the accident didn’t mention the whole dragging part. According to TechCrunch, Cruise engineering exec Mo Elshenawy will take over as president and CTO.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Cruise didn’t tell the California DMV the full story of its robotaxi’s pedestrian strike at first.

Vice Motherboard reported yesterday that Cruise’s email summary of the accident said the car “hard-braked but was unable to stop” before hitting a pedestrian. But it didn’t mention that the car then pulled over, dragging the person with it.

California’s DMV revoked the company’s self-driving license. Cruise then halted robotaxi operation, later expanded the pause to include supervised and manually-driven Cruise trips for safety review.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Another bad week for self-driving cars.

Cruise continues to try to clean up the mess from a crash in early October that resulted in a woman being drug 20 feet underneath a driverless car. To hear more about it, you can check out my recent interview with Marketplace’s Matt Levin. We mostly spoke about the piece I wrote about the AV industry’s ongoing trust issues.

Uber failed to help cities go green — will robotaxis, too?

Uber and Lyft were supposed to reduce carbon emissions, but they turned out to be polluters. Robotaxis look to repeat some of the same mistakes.

David Zipper
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Cruise robotaxi shutdown expands, pressing pause on supervised and manual trips too.

Cruise’s robotaxis are front and center of the industry’s trust issue after losing their California permit following an incident where a pedestrian ended up stuck underneath one of its cars.

It already halted service nationwide and said it’s installing new updates. Now Cruise has announced it’s taking its cars off of public roads while it undergoes a full safety review. Meanwhile, Cruise board member and GM legal executive VP Craig Glidden is “expanding” his role to lead Cruise’s Legal, Communications, and Finance teams.

In the coming days, we are also pausing our supervised and manual AV operations in the U.S., affecting roughly 70 vehicles. This orderly pause is a further step to rebuild public trust while we undergo a full safety review. We will continue to operate our vehicles in closed course training environments and maintain an active simulation program in order to stay focused on advancing AV technology.

Volvo CEO Jim Rowan thinks dropping Apple CarPlay is a mistake

As cars become computers on wheels, the former BlackBerry and Dyson executive is approaching Volvo’s EV transformation with a consumer electronics mindset.

Nilay Patel
We only get one planetWe only get one planet
Kara Verlaney
Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
GM’s autonomous Cruise vans put on pause.

After producing hundreds of the self-driving vans already, “we did make the decision with GM to pause production of the Origin,” said Cruise CEO Kyle Vogt in leaked audio obtained by Forbes and later confirmed by GM. The decision comes after Cruise recently halted its robotaxi services nationwide. The company is on a trust-building campaign after California suspended Cruise’s operating license, calling autonomous vehicles a public risk.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
TFW your Uber driver is an empty seat.

Starting today, Phoenix residents can use the Uber app to hail a ride in a driverless Waymo vehicle. The two companies — former rivals turned frenemies (?) — first announced the partnership earlier this year. Tellingly, it’s only available in Arizona, and not California, where tensions around robotaxis are starting to get, well, tense.

Screenshot of the Uber app on an iPhone prompting a rider to accept a ride with a Waymo-operated autonomous vehicle.
Image: Waymo
Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Robotaxi ripple effects in California.

The California DMV’s suspension of Cruise’s robotaxi permit in San Francisco is now reverberating down in Los Angeles. Los Angeles City Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez is planning to file a motion today that urges state officials to “reign in the expansion of robotaxis” in the city. Waymo is in the process of beta testing a robotaxi service in LA, which is plans on expanding next year.

Soto-Martinez is being joined by the Teamsters union, which has emerged as one of the most prominent critics of driverless cars and trucks in the state.

Umar Shakir
Umar Shakir
Musk dodges question about accepting legal liability for Tesla Full Self-Driving cars.

During Tesla’s Q3 earnings call, an investor mentions that Mercedes says it’ll accept legal liability for its Level 3 autonomous system, and asks if Tesla will do the same. Musk replies with a laugh: “There’s a lot of people who assume we have legal liability... judging by the lawsuits.”

Musk also said FSD is only available in North America because in the US “you can deploy things at risk or take liability,” whereas other countries have extensive approval programs.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Robotaxis in the Bayou City.

Houston is the next city in the US to get a robotaxi service, courtesy of Cruise, which just announced the launch today. The driverless vehicles will be available seven days a week from 9PM-6AM in Downtown, Midtown, East Downtown, Montrose, Hyde Park, and River Oaks neighborhoods. Robotaxi companies have been targeting bigger, more populous markets, as the pressure to start bringing in more revenue continues to grow. Waymo just started testing the waters in LA, and now Cruise is going after the fourth biggest city in the US.

Cruise robotaxi in Houston
Cruise’s robotaxis will only operate at night to start out.
Image: Cruise
Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
What about driver’s ed for driverless cars?

This opinion piece in the New York Times argues we’re “driving blind” when it comes to autonomous vehicles, citing recent robotaxi crashes in San Francisco and the growing number of fatal Tesla Autopilot incidents. The writer argues that while the federal government regulates hardware, and the states oversee drivers, there’s no one testing to see whether the software operating these vehicles is up to snuff. And that amounts to “a loophole large enough for Elon Musk, General Motors and Waymo to drive thousands of cars through.”

We put our blind faith in Mercedes-Benz’s first-of-its-kind autonomous Drive Pilot feature

Drive Pilot is a Level 3 autonomous system, meaning you can take your hands off the wheel and — more notably — your eyes off the road during certain conditions. But are we ready to give up this much control?

Daniel Golson
Umar Shakir
Umar Shakir
Are traffic jam-prone robotaxis coming to your city?

California has green-lit 24/7 service expansion of the vehicles in San Francisco, enabling Waymo and Cruise the freedom to operate during daytime hours. Robotaxis are the subject of traffic jam chaos, and one was involved in a crash with an emergency vehicle last week. And they’re expanding to more cities.

The latest episode of Vox’s Today, Explained podcast has Sean Rameswaram hosting Liz Lindqwister, a data journalist for the San Francisco Standard who’s documenting robotaxi expansion — while also using them.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Driverless buses are tooling around San Francisco’s Treasure Island in a test for the next few months.

The autonomous shuttles offer free rides along a fixed, seven-stop route in the artificial island’s center from August 2023 to April 2024 (via AP News).

Called The Loop, the shuttle has no steering wheel, but an onboard attendant can take over with a handheld remote if needed, according to Insider. Its maker, Beep, previously tested it as a medical supply transport in Florida in 2020.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Cruise is cutting its San Francisco robotaxi fleet in half.

Prompted by a collision Thursday between one of Cruise’s robotaxis and a fire truck, Cruise has agreed to reduce its fleet after being asked to by the California Department of Motor Vehicles, writes The New York Times.

The regulator says it’s investigating Cruise incidents, and pending the outcome of that, it “reserves the right... to suspend or revoke testing and/or deployment permits.”