The autonomous vehicle (AV) industry is facing a significant accountability crisis. While companies like Waymo expand their commercial operations to 10 U.S. cities, a new report from Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) highlights a “stunning lack of transparency” regarding the human element behind the wheel.
The Human Safety Net Remains a Secret
Senator Markey recently pressed seven major players—Aurora, May Mobility, Motional, Nuro, Tesla, Waymo, and Zoox—for data on how often remote staff must intervene to guide their vehicles. Every single company refused to disclose these figures.
This silence is fueling a push for stricter federal oversight. Markey is now urging the NHTSA to investigate and is drafting legislation to impose “strict guardrails” on remote operations. Notably, Tesla admitted that its remote workers can actually assume direct control of vehicles as a final safety maneuver, a step beyond mere “assistance.”
Strategic Shifts and Big-Money Deals
While regulators push for data, the market continues to move at high speed:
- Uber’s Luxury Pivot: Uber is acquiring the Berlin-based chauffeur service Blacklane to bolster its high-end “Uber Elite” offerings.
- Autonomous Delivery: Also, a Rivian spin-off, is partnering with DoorDash to build autonomous delivery robots. DoorDash also joined Also’s $200 million Series C funding round.
- Defense & Heavy Industry: Saronic Technologies raised a massive $1.75 billion for autonomous military ships, while Voltify secured $30 million to retrofit diesel locomotives with batteries.
Industry Milestones and Roadblocks
The transition to a driverless future remains bumpy. Waymo is now operating at San Antonio International Airport, yet it faces scrutiny over how its vehicles interact with school buses. Meanwhile, Tesla has officially ended production of the Model S and X, signaling a definitive pivot toward a robotaxi-centric business model.
In global news, WeRide and Uber have launched driverless operations in Dubai, while Baidu’s fleet in Wuhan recently suffered a system failure that trapped passengers for hours. For a deeper look at delivery strategy, the latest Autonocast episode features an interview with DoorDash’s VP of Autonomy, Ashu Rege.







