Where can we find the statistics proving it's safer than a human driver?Where can we see those statistics?
"Trust me bro!"Where can we find the statistics proving it's safer than a human driver?
Yep. Most of the "monitor your driving to give you a discount" services penalize you for driving at night.Unironically yes. This is already a thing.
https://www.thedrive.com/news/tesla-insurance-charges-you-more-if-you-drive-at-night
Yup, just another marketing scheme to lure in new customers (suckers?) and grow revenue.Yep. Most of the "monitor your driving to give you a discount" services penalize you for driving at night.
I had Progressive, and they have three 'scores' - "Phone use", "Hard braking", and "speeding." I scored 100 in all three. And yet my 'overall score' was 69. of course, the big discount threshold was at 70.
Why was it so low? "unspecified reasons". I called in to find out, it was because I regularly drove at night.
What is the frequency with which an driver must take over FSD and has a "critical disengagement"? 1,454 on FSD 14 late 2025 data, right? The very most optimistic version is once every 9,200 miles.Where can we see those statistics?
Please provide a link to where you provided evidence that an automaker is shipping true self driving.False, and I already posted the evidence. Did you read the thread or rush to reply?
This is not necessarily at odds with having a 50% discount for every mile on FSD.Bottom line actual truth: The Model Y has a significantly higher fatal accident rate and nearly double the insurance cost of a comparable RAV4.
How is any of that relevant to Lemonades discount for FSD driven miles? FSD that is currently shipping in FSD Supervised so its an Level 2 ADAS system.Please provide a link to where you provided evidence that an automaker is shipping true self driving.
You posted one photo of one person's Tesla saying that it has driven ~5000 miles on FSD, that being 100% of their miles driven since updating to FSD 14.2.
That is not the same as "evidence that a carmaker is shipping true self driving."
Telsa is shipping level 2 driver assistance that they call "Full Self Driving - Supervised". The driver still has all legal responsibility for the actions of the vehicle, and must be ready to take over control with zero notice at any time. The fact that some people are successfully using it without intervention for decently long periods of time/distance is not evidence that the tech is truly ready for *ALL* users to use it unsupervised.
Which would be needed to meet everyone but a Tesla-stan's definition of "true self driving."
Meanwhile, a route I take at least once a week, FSD tries to change *OUT* of the exit lane I need to be in after the line has become solid on a well-traveled major freeway intersection."Model S completed the 3,081-mile trip entirely without human intervention."
https://www.thedrive.com/news/a-tes...hlid=e176cc74b7a0d4dbb52649a02f0592e38a901ca5
Alex Roy and a team of independent autonomy experts just completed a Tesla FSD "Cannonball Run" with zero disengagements.
If someone were to claim that FSD is “statistically safer” than humans (in a way meant to convince others or influence a debate), then, yeah, they should have to show which statistics led them to that conclusion. But that’s not what I’m seeing. I see an insurance company offering discounts for using FSD, so _they_ think that _their_ statistics show that, but they’re not trying to convince anybody of that notion. _They_ believe it and they’re willing to put their money where their beliefs are.Where can we find the statistics proving it's safer than a human driver?
See how that works?