General Motors’ robot car unit Cruise will pay $500,000 to resolve criminal charges from the DOJ for falsifying a federal report after a grisly 2023 crash.
GM's robotaxi unit Cruise has agreed to pay a $500,000 for submitting a false accident report as part of a deferred ...
Reuters The vehicle has no steering wheel or pedals This is not Cruise's first foray into driverless cars. For years it has been testing modified Chevrolet Bolt electric cars with test drivers at ...
New reporting claims President-elect Donald Trump is paving the way for broader deployment of autonomous vehicles on ...
General Motors' self-driving car unit, Cruise, admitted on Thursday to submitting a false report to influence a federal ...
Yet the company has continued to express interest in driverless cars as a way to cut out its chief expense: paying drivers. It's now tapping GM's Cruise—which itself had a pedestrian incident ...
Waymo, the self-driving car and robotaxi subsidiary of Alphabet, Inc. and competitor to GM Cruise, just closed an additional ...
Instead, Cruise is using the cars without their autonomous ... we resume fully driverless operations in collaboration with a city,” Cruise said. GM CEO Marry Barra once said that Cruise and ...
The goal of Cruise is to create a suite of products that will eventually turn any car into a driverless vehicle. After the GM deal was announced, Vogt didn't characterize Cruise's technology as an ...
Cruise LLC, the robotaxi company owned by General Motors Co, said its fleet is now ... were given permission in August to expand paid driverless services in San Francisco. The Cruise firetruck ...
The company admitted withholding key details about a horrific 2023 crash “with the intent to impede, obstruct, or influence” a federal investigation.