"Humans had to come and manually take the cars away."

Maybe Driver

More than a half dozen GM Cruise robotaxis shut down simultaneously on a San Francisco street on Tuesday night — a mere week after Cruise officially launched its fare-collecting driverless robotaxi service in the city.

The incident caused traffic to build up for hours, until GM employees were able to manually move the vehicles away, TechCrunch reports. It's hilarious, but also an incident that goes to show the significant remaining liabilities still blocking autonomous vehicles from a mainstream role in transportation infrastructure.

Surreal Life

Photos shared on the San Francisco subreddit shows a number of Cruise cars seemingly blocking several lanes of a major thoroughfare "for a couple of hours," according to the user who shared the images.

"It was a pretty surreal event," one user commented. "Humans had to come and manually take the cars away."

"They're unionizing," another joked.

A Cruise spokesperson later clarified to TechCrunch that "we had an issue earlier this week that caused some of our vehicles to cluster together."

"While it was resolved and no passengers were impacted, we apologize to anyone who was inconvenienced," they added.

Growing Pains

Introducing robotaxis in a city full of human drivers has already led to some unusual encounters on public streets. In April, for instance, a viral video showed confused San Francisco police officers pulling over a driverless Cruise robotaxi.

In many ways, these growing pains are only to be expected. For better or worse, tech companies like Cruise or Tesla still have a lot of kinks to iron out as they push for a driverless future.

Fortunately, nobody got hurt this time around — though the threat always looms.

READ MORE: Cruise robotaxis blocked traffic for hours on this San Francisco street [TechCrunch]

More on Cruise: GM's Robotaxis Are Now Collecting Fares with No Safety Driver


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