The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said its
preliminary evaluation covers various 2017-2022 model year Tesla
Model 3, S, X, and Y vehicles. This functionality, referred to
as “Passenger Play,” "may distract the driver and increase the
risk of a crash," the agency said.
NHTSA said it has "confirmed that this capability has been
available since December 2020 in Tesla 'Passenger Play'-equipped
vehicles." Before then, the game feature "was enabled only when
the vehicle was in Park."
Tesla did not immediately comment. NHTSA said it "will evaluate
aspects of the feature, including the frequency and use
scenarios of Tesla 'Passenger Play'."
Earlier this month, the New York Times highlighted the game
feature prompting NHTSA to say it was in discussions with Tesla
about the feature.
The agency noted earlier in December that distracted driving
accounts for a significant number of U.S. road deaths - 3,142 in
2019 alone. Safety advocates have said official figures
underestimate the problem because not all distracted drivers
admit the issue after crashes.
The Times said the Tesla update added three games - solitaire, a
jet fighter and conquest strategy scenario - and added vehicles
have warnings reading: "Playing while the car is in motion is
only for passengers."
The Times reported that a button asks for confirmation that the
player is a passenger, though a driver could play simply by
pressing the button.
In 2013, NHTSA issued guidelines to encourage automakers "to
factor safety and driver distraction prevention into their
designs and adoption of infotainment devices in vehicles."
The guidelines "recommend that in-vehicle devices be designed so
that they cannot be used by the driver to perform inherently
distracting secondary tasks while driving," the agency said.
The agency in August opened a safety investigation into 765,000
Tesla vehicles over its driver-assistance system Autopilot after
a series of crashes involving the system and parked emergency
vehicles.
A preliminary evaluation is a first step before NHTSA decides
whether to upgrade a probe to an engineering analysis, which
must happen before the agency can demand a recall.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Andrew Heavens,
Kirsten Donovan)
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