Tesla faces protests in Austin over Musk’s robotaxi plans

Tesla faces protests in Austin over Musk’s robotaxi plans


Blythe Christopher attends a demonstration to protest Tesla robotaxis on June 12, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

Todd Wiseman

With Elon Musk looking to June 22 as his tentative start date for Tesla’s pilot robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, protesters are voicing their opposition.

Public safety advocates and political protesters, upset with Musk’s work with the Trump administration, joined together in downtown Austin on Thursday to express their concerns about the robotaxi launch. Members of the Dawn Project, Tesla Takedown and Resist Austin say that Tesla’s partially automated driving systems have safety problems.

Tesla sells its cars with a standard Autopilot package, or a premium Full Self-Driving option (also known as FSD or FSD supervised), in the U.S. Automobiles with these systems, which include features like automatic lane keeping, steering and parking, have been involved in dozens of collisions, some fatal, according to data tracked by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Tesla’s robotaxis, which Musk showed off in a video clip on X earlier this week, are new versions of the company’s popular Model Y vehicles, equipped with a future release of Tesla’s FSD software. That “unsupervised” FSD, or robotaxi technology, is not yet available to the public.

Tesla critics with The Dawn Project, which calls itself a tech-safety and security education business, brought a version of Model Y with relatively recent FSD software (version 2025.14.9) to show residents of Austin how it works.

In their demonstration on Thursday, they showed how a Tesla with FSD engaged zoomed past a school bus with a stop sign held out and ran over a child-sized mannequin that they put in front of the vehicle.

A Tesla Model Y with Full Self-Driving (Supervised) v. 13.2.9 engaged fails to stop for a child dummy in the road at a demonstration in Austin, Texas on June 12, 2025.

Todd Wiseman

Dawn Project CEO Dan O’Dowd also runs Green Hills Software, which sells technology to Tesla competitors, including Ford and Toyota.

Stephanie Gomez, who attended the demonstration, told CNBC that she didn’t like the role Musk had been playing in the government. Additionally, she said she has no confidence in Tesla’s safety standards and said there’s been a lack of transparency from Tesla regarding how its robotaxis will work.

Another protester, Silvia Revelis, said she also opposed Musk’s political activity, but that safety is the biggest concern.

“Citizens have not been able to get safety testing results,” she said. “Musk believes he’s above the law.”

Tesla didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

— Todd Wiseman contributed to this report.

WATCH: Tesla’s next leg up is $400

Tesla's next leg up is $400 per share, says KKM's Jeff Kilburg



Source

Datadog’s stock soars 23% on revenue beat, posts second-best day ever
Technology

Datadog’s stock soars 23% on revenue beat, posts second-best day ever

Omar Marques | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images Datadog shares jumped 23% on Thursday after the software company reported third-quarter revenue that topped Wall Street estimates and issued a strong forecast for the fourth quarter. The stock had its second-best day ever, behind only November 2023, when shares rose 28%. The company reported […]

Read More
OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar says company isn’t seeking government backstop, clarifying prior comment
Technology

OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar says company isn’t seeking government backstop, clarifying prior comment

Sarah Friar, CFO of OpenAI, appears on CNBC’s Squawk Box on August 20, 2025. CNBC OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said late Wednesday that the artificial intelligence startup is not seeking a government backstop for its infrastructure commitments, clarifying previous comments she made on stage during the Wall Street Journal’s Tech Live event. At the event, […]

Read More
Meta reportedly projected 10% of 2024 sales came from scam, fraud ads
Technology

Meta reportedly projected 10% of 2024 sales came from scam, fraud ads

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta Platforms Inc., during a dinner with tech leaders in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025. US President Donald Trump said he would be imposing tariffs on semiconductor imports “very shortly” but spare goods from companies like Apple […]

Read More