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Dan O’Dowd, California tech CEO running for U.S. Senate, wants to ban Tesla’s Full-Self Driving

April 21, 2022
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WASHINGTON — A California tech mogul running for U.S. Senate is targeting Tesla Inc.’s Full Self-Driving beta software in a nationwide ad campaign to ban the system from U.S. roads.

Dan O’Dowd, founder and CEO of Green Hills Software, on Tuesday launched a campaign to represent California as a Democrat in the upper house.

The self-described billionaire said he’s campaigning to “make computers safe for humanity” and ban Tesla’s FSD, referring to the technology as “the most unreliable safety-critical computer system.”

“This campaign is about public safety,” O’Dowd said in an emailed statement to Automotive News on Wednesday. “The potential of self-driving car technology is important. If we get this right, we’ll save billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of lives. But Tesla has put tens of thousands of cars on the street with deeply flawed Full Self-Driving software that endangers other drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists.”

O’Dowd said there is a need for “common-sense regulation” and testing that is safe and effective.

“We need to get Tesla’s 60,000 cars with defective Full Self-Driving software off the road immediately,” he added.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a request by Automotive News for comment.

The controversially named beta software expands Tesla’s Autopilot mode by including more advanced driver-assistance features for U.S. drivers, but drivers must remain fully engaged in the driving task. No automaker sells a vehicle for public purchase today that is self-driving.

This year, Tesla recalled more than 50,000 U.S. vehicles with the FSD software because it allowed them to conduct a “rolling stop” at some intersections.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has frequently clashed with federal regulators. In February, he referred to NHTSA as the “fun police” on Twitter after having to recall certain models that failed to comply with a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard on minimum sound requirements for electric vehicles.

Since August, NHTSA has opened two formal defect investigations into Tesla’s Autopilot system.

Democratic Sens. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Ed Markey of Massachusetts also voiced concerns about Tesla’s “misleading advertising and marketing” of its Autopilot and FSD features to consumers and urged the Federal Trade Commission to take action.

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