Musk Finally Admits It: Millions of Teslas Will Never Drive Themselves
Tesla sold four million cars whose hardware it promised could drive itself. The hardware can't. Now Musk wants to build factories across the country to swap the computers out.
Tesla sold four million cars whose hardware it promised could drive itself. The hardware can't. Now Musk wants to build factories across the country to swap the computers out.
The National Agency for Secure Titles — the word is right there in the name — may have lost data covering a third of France's population. Criminals are already shopping the haul on underground forums.
TSMC can now build cutting-edge chips without ASML's $380 million high-NA machines — and Google just replaced Intel's x86 with its own Arm silicon across its entire AI accelerator line. The foundational hardware of the AI era is being redesigned by an ever-smaller circle of companies.
The law firm that advises OpenAI on responsible AI deployment filed fabricated citations in federal bankruptcy court. Its safeguards didn't catch them. Opposing counsel did.
Florida's attorney general says if ChatGPT were a person, he'd charge it with murder. He's now investigating whether OpenAI bears criminal culpability all the same — a first in US legal history.
An unauthorized group accessed Anthropic's most dangerous cybersecurity AI on launch day through a vendor loophole. The federal agency charged with protecting America's critical infrastructure still doesn't have it.
CATL's latest LFP battery charges from 10% to 98% in just over six minutes — roughly three minutes faster than BYD's best. No Western battery maker has publicly demonstrated anything close.
Meta will log every mouse movement, click, and keystroke from its US employees to train AI agents. The same workforce facing 10% layoffs next month is generating the data that could automate their jobs.
Daniel Moreno-Gama brought a Molotov cocktail and a document vowing to kill AI executives to Sam Altman's doorstep. The most prominent act of anti-AI violence on record is heading to court.
The EU's 2027 battery mandate doesn't mean snap-off back panels are coming back. But the days of aggressively glued-together phones are numbered — and the ripple effects could reshape global hardware design.
Four months after reports that Apple's top chip designer was considering leaving, Johny Srouji has been promoted to run all of the company's hardware. The move locks down Apple's most important technical advantage before John Ternus takes over as CEO.
Tim Cook grew Apple from $350 billion to $4 trillion. His replacement is a mechanical engineer who has spent 25 years building hardware and has never run a company. The markets will decide whether product instincts beat operational discipline.
Tesla's robotaxi expansion to Dallas and Houston lasted roughly 48 hours before availability flatlined. Tracking data suggests the company deployed one car per city — three days before its Q1 earnings call.
French prosecutors have summoned Elon Musk over Grok's generation of millions of sexualised deepfakes on his own platform. Whether the world's richest man shows up is the immediate question.
The NSA is running Anthropic's Mythos model — and expanding it — despite a formal Pentagon blacklist. Two days earlier, Trump said he had "no idea" his own chief of staff met with Anthropic's CEO.
Blue Origin just became the second company ever to land a reused orbital-class booster. The commercial satellite it was carrying may be in the wrong orbit.
Honor's Lightning robot finished Beijing's half-marathon in 50:26 — seven minutes faster than any human has ever run the distance. Twelve months ago, most of these machines couldn't complete the course.
Three more executives walked out Friday as OpenAI killed the projects they led. The talent is flowing straight to Anthropic, Meta, and Google — and the company's $852 billion valuation has not yet priced that in.
A Starlink service disruption knocked out US military drone tests this month. The real story isn't the outage — it's that the Pentagon has no backup.
A mainstream AI model — not the restricted Mythos — built a full Chrome exploit chain for the price of a laptop. The patch gap in millions of desktop apps just became a whole lot more exploitable.