In a regulatory filing, the company confirmed an ongoing DOJ investigation, and said the feds had requested specific materials.
The 2016 video appears to show a Tesla driving and parking without its human passenger intervening.
Tesla's autopilot feature is being called into question during an upcoming criminal trial, and follows various safety recalls.
Hey Elon, it turns out people think cars are driverless when you call them 'full-self driving.'
Previous software may have caused the vehicle to turn without correctly predicting the path of an oncoming vehicle, which could “increase the risk of a crash.”
The company sent a cease-and-desist letter to the group that published footage of a Tesla plowing down a kiddie crash test dummy.
First of its kind data released by the NHTSA revealed 392 reported crashes involving advanced driver-assistance tech that left six people dead.
The NHTSA expanded its investigation of Tesla's Autopilot features which it says has been involved in at least 16 crashes with first responder vehicles.
Love them or hate them, self-driving cars are definitely...happening.
The NHTSA said its previous rules are "logically unnecessary" in light of new vehicles built with automation in mind.
The California court's decision comes just over a month after the self-driving car giant sued the DMV over a public records request.
The recall comes less than a month after Tesla re-introduced FSD driver profiles which, in some cases, would willingly engage in rolling stops.
The driver was charged with two counts of vehicular manslaughter after two people were killed by the Tesla when Autopilot was engaged.
The feature is part of the company's holiday update.
The automaker is modifying "Passenger Play" days after a federal agency opened an investigation into the feature to evaluate its potential to distract drivers.
The NHTSA will evaluate the “driver distraction potential” of Tesla's Passenger Play feature, which can reportledy be used while in motion.
The games are only meant for passengers, but there's nothing stopping the driver from lying and starting up the game.
Tesla's new requirement speaks to a larger issue around privacy trade-offs with certain types of in-car driver monitoring systems.
The issue was the result of a server issue impacting Tesla users spread out across multiple continents.
An NHTSA complaint alleges a Telsa Model Y with FSD engaged was "severely damaged" after mistakenly turning into the wrong lane and colliding with another car.