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Tesla seeks to keep Texas robotaxi data under wraps, regulator says

According to a letter published on Monday, Tesla informed U.S. regulators its answers on the safety and deployment of its robotaxi in Texas were confidential business information that should not be released. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced on Friday that it was reviewing the answers provided to questions about the safety and reliability of Tesla's self-driving roboticaxi in bad weather.

The agency stated on Monday that Tesla is invoking federal law which "restricts NHTSA’s ability to release publicly what the companies call confidential." The agency said that, "after assessing these responses and any other relevant information NHTSA will be taking any necessary action to protect road safety." Since October, NHTSA is investigating collisions between Tesla vehicles that use Full Self-Driving Software in conditions of low visibility. The investigation covers 2.4 millions Tesla vehicles with FSD after four reported accidents, including one fatal accident in 2023.

NHTSA stated on Monday that the agency's investigation remains open into Tesla's FSD Supervised/Beta.

Tesla says the information it provided to NHTSA was commercially valuable, as competitors could use it for their own automated and advanced driving systems.

In a letter to NHTSA, Casey Blaine, Tesla's regulatory senior counsel wrote that "nefarious actors" could use the marked information in order to discredit Tesla for the sake or notoriety. In the absence of public disclosure, accessing the marked information would require significant time and resource expenditures and intimate knowledge of Tesla. Tesla released a small fleet of self-driving cabs to pick up paying passengers on Sunday in Austin, Texas. Elon Musk announced the launch of robotaxis and social media influencers posted videos of their rides.

Musk believes that the Tesla EV maker will be able to survive financially if it can attract paying passengers.

Tesla shares rose 8% to $347.80 in the afternoon on Monday.

(source: Reuters)