Amazon's robotaxi unit Zoox agrees to software recall after self-driving crash
The Hindu
Amazon.com’s Zoox agreed to recall 270 driverless vehicles after a crash.
Amazon.com's self-driving unit Zoox agreed to recall 270 driverless vehicles after an unoccupied robotaxi was involved in an April 8 crash with a passenger car in Las Vegas.
Zoox said on Tuesday there were no injuries in the crash. The Zoox Automated Driving Systems in certain driving scenarios "may make an inaccurate prediction when another vehicle slowly approaches perpendicularly and stops. In these scenarios, the Zoox vehicle may not be able to avoid a crash."
Zoox paused operations for several days pending a safety review of the incident and developed a software update to address the issue.
Anticipating the passenger car would proceed forward, the Zoox robotaxi slowed down and steered to the right, but the passenger car came to a stop, fully yielding to the Zoox robotaxi and remaining in the shoulder lane, the company said, adding the robotaxi braked hard, but was unable to avoid striking the passenger vehicle.
Zoox said the issue occurs when Zoox vehicles are operating at speeds greater than 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) and a vehicle incrementally encroaches from a perpendicular driveway.
In April, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration closed a probe into 258 Zoox vehicles over a braking issue after Zoox issued a recall to update their software.
NHTSA opened the probe in May 2024 following two rear-end collisions that injured motorcyclists after the automated vehicles braked unexpectedly.

On December 7, 1909, Belgian-American chemist Leo Baekeland’s process patent for making Bakelite was granted, two years after he had figured it out. Bakelite is the first fully synthetic plastic and its invention marked the beginning of the Age of Plastics. A.S.Ganesh tells you more about Baekeland and his Bakelite…












