- cross-posted to:
- usa@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- usa@lemmy.ml
Tesla recalls 2.2 million cars — nearly all of its vehicles sold in the U.S. — over warning light issue::Warning lights on the Tesla vehicles are hard to read, raising the risk of a crash, according to traffic safety regulators.
The recall is an official designation. And yeah, pretty cool with Tesla that a lot of the recalls are done through firmware updates.
If I’m a shareholder, this is news I would want to know about. Just because you don’t care doesn’t mean others feel the same.
I don’t think it’s about not wanting to hear it, more so about the language used, that feels overboard. I feel it’s a combination of a car industry regulator in need of updating their terminology and news outlets looking to make everything sound sensational - the end result leaving you feel like you’ve been mislead about what’s actually going on.
Exactly. Good example is my Ram 3500 diesel. Just got a recall and I have to drive it in, and have them update something that’ll take 1-2 hours to fix that bullshit emission issue Ram got caught fucking up. That’s far more of an issue but it’s still rather minor.
Don’t get me wrong, I care. It’s just a recall traditionally meant the owner bring in a vehicle for a material repair.
A software update requiring an owner to bring a vehicle to a dealer to upgrade also applies.
But Teslas have automatic wireless updates. I don’t think the word recall is appropriate as it doesn’t require any user intervention as far as I’m aware. Call it a software update like everything else.
Simply because OTA updates and large screens on cars are so new. It’s a recall because that’s the word NHTSA uses whenever there is something the manufacturer is forced to fix, it doesn’t matter how they fix it.
Simply because OTA updates and large screens on cars are so new. It’s a recall because that’s the word NHTSA uses whenever there is something the manufacturer is forced to fix, it doesn’t matter how they fix it.