TechCrunch News 10月13日 02:27
监管与创新:科技公司在交通领域的最新动态
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本周,交通科技领域动态频频。埃隆·马斯克的公司面临多项监管挑战:Boring Company在内华达州被指控近800项违规,涉及非法挖掘和污染;特斯拉因拒绝或延迟客户索赔,在加州受到保险部门的处罚。此外,美国国家公路交通安全管理局(NHTSA)正在调查特斯拉的全自动驾驶(FSD)软件,因其可能导致车辆闯红灯或驶入错误车道。通用汽车在Cruise项目结束后,正重新评估其自动驾驶策略,并招聘前Cruise员工。Joby Aviation通过出售股票筹集资金,计划在迪拜和美国推出电动垂直起降(eVTOL)客运服务。同时,Futurail、Nexcade等初创公司也获得了新的融资。在政策方面,加州签署法案允许Uber和Lyft司机组成工会。Lucid和Lyft在电动汽车和自动驾驶领域均有新动作,Lyft更是与Tensor Auto达成合作,计划在2027年部署机器人出租车。

🚗 **监管审查趋严,科技巨头面临挑战**:埃隆·马斯克旗下的Boring Company在内华达州因多项违规行为面临严厉处罚,特斯拉则因保险索赔问题受到加州监管机构的关注。美国NHTSA对特斯拉的全自动驾驶(FSD)软件展开调查,凸显了自动驾驶技术在安全性和合规性上面临的持续压力,这直接关系到特斯拉在自动驾驶领域的长期战略和机器人出租车计划。

🤖 **自动驾驶技术发展路径多元化**:通用汽车在关闭Cruise项目后,正通过改造现有车辆和组建新的自动驾驶团队来推进其技术研发,显示出其在个人自动驾驶车辆和ADAS(高级驾驶辅助系统)领域的持续投入。同时,Lyft也与Tensor Auto合作,计划在2027年于欧美部署机器人出租车,表明行业正探索不同的自动驾驶应用场景和商业模式。

💰 **初创企业融资活跃,行业生态加速整合**:Joby Aviation成功通过股票销售筹集了大量资金,为其实现eVTOL客运商业化运营奠定了基础。此外,Futurail、Nexcade等专注于不同细分领域的初创公司也获得了可观的种子轮和pre-seed轮融资,显示出资本市场对交通科技创新领域的持续看好,尽管部分公司如Joby Aviation的股票发行价低于预期,反映了市场对盈利能力和发展前景的谨慎考量。

⚡ **新能源汽车与电池技术合作加速**:Lucid电动汽车第三季度的交付量创下新高,显示其在电动汽车市场稳步增长。同时,丰田与Metal Mining达成合作,共同研发和大规模生产用于纯电动汽车的全固态电池正极材料,预示着下一代电池技术的竞争与合作正在升温,旨在提升电动汽车的性能和续航能力。

⚖️ **政策法规调整,驱动行业新变化**:加州签署法案赋予Uber和Lyft的独立承包商司机组建工会的权利,这可能对零工经济和出行服务行业产生深远影响。DoorDash与Serve Robotics的合作则表明,即使在发展内部自动配送技术的同时,企业也积极寻求外部合作以加速自动配送机器人的部署,显示出行业在应对成本、效率和监管等多重因素下的灵活策略。

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility, your hub for all things “future of transportation.” To get this in your inbox, sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility!

Elon Musk has never had the best relationship with regulators, often bumping up against or outright sidestepping local and state laws where his numerous companies operate. 

This week has been particularly active on the regulatory front. 

Musk’s tunneling and infrastructure firm The Boring Company is accused of nearly 800 violations by Nevada regulators, including digging without approval, dumping untreated water onto city streets, failing to install silt fences, and tracking dirt from construction sites onto nearby roadways, a ProPublica investigation discovered. 

Then there is Tesla, which was hit with an enforcement action by California’s Department of Insurance for routinely denying or delaying customer claims despite years of warnings from the state regulator. Reminder: Tesla is an insurance provider in certain states.  

Tesla also has the attention, once again, of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The agency opened an investigation into Tesla’s Full Self-Driving tech after receiving reports the software caused vehicles to run red lights or cross into wrong lanes. 

The NHTSA has investigated Tesla before. But this one is notable because it specifically targets Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) driver-assistance software. And Musk, as well as Tesla shareholders, have pinned the company’s future on its ability to be a leader in autonomous vehicle technology, as well as robotics and AI. 

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This single investigation likely won’t derail Tesla’s plans; the company just rolled out the newest version of FSD (v14). But it is another example of increased scrutiny on the technology that Tesla is trying to put front and center and raises questions about its robotaxis, which uses a version of its FSD software.

Image Credits:Bryce Durbin

A Wired article from July discovered that General Motors repurposed a few Chevy Bolt EVs that had been part of the shuttered Cruise robotaxi program and was driving them on select highways in Michigan near Austin, Texas, and the San Francisco Bay Area to develop simulation models and new driver-assistance technology.

Now it seems that General Motors might be moving forward with its autonomous vehicle development but in potentially surprising ways. When GM absorbed Cruise in December 2024, it said it would combine Cruise’s tech with its own ADAS efforts to develop fully autonomous personal vehicles.

We’re hearing chatter here and there that GM is building out an AV team across Austin and Mountain View. This comes just a couple months after GM started rehiring laid-off Cruise employees, per Bloomberg.

We’re poking around and if you know anything, reach out.

Got a tip for us? Email Kirsten Korosec at kirsten.korosec@techcrunch.com or my Signal at kkorosec.07, or email Sean O’Kane at sean.okane@techcrunch.com.

Image Credits:Bryce Durbin

Joby Aviation sold 30.5 million shares to raise about $514 million, money that the company said would be used to fund certification and manufacturing efforts and prepare for commercial operations, as well as for general working capital and other general corporate purposes. The company plans to start carrying passengers in its electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft in Dubai in 2026, followed by the United States. 

Investors didn’t react too favorably, though, because shares went for a discount. Under the deal, they sold for $16.85 per share, nearly 11% lower than the previous close.

Other deals that got my attention this week …

I forgot this one last week. Futurail, a European startup developing an autonomy stack for self-driving trains, raised €7.5 million in seed funding co-led by Asterion Ventures and Leap435, joined by EIT Urban Mobility and U.S. investors Zero Infinity Partners and Heroic Ventures. Side note: The Autonocast, a podcast I co-host, recently had Alex Haag, CEO and co-founder of Futurail, on the show. Take a listen

Nexcade, a London-based startup developing end-to-end automation for freight forwarders, raised $2.5 million in a pre-seed round led by Connect Ventures. MMC Ventures, Entropy Industrial Capital, and Inovia also participated.

Toyota and Metal Mining have struck a deal to work together on the mass production of cathode materials for all-solid-state batteries to be installed in battery electric vehicles.

Tycho AI, an autonomous drone navigation startup, raised $10 million in a Series A round led by FirstMark.

Utilimarc, a Minneapolis-based fleet analytics and benchmarking company, was acquired by Smith System. The terms were not disclosed.

Image Credits:Bryce Durbin

California governor Gavin Newsom signed a bill that gives Uber and Lyft drivers in the state the right to unionize as independent contractors. 

Just last week, we featured DoorDash’s efforts to build its own autonomous delivery robot. But that internal program isn’t stopping the company from outside partnerships. DoorDash and Serve Robotics announced a multi-year partnership that would see them using autonomous robots to make deliveries across the United States.

Lucid delivered a record number of EVs in the third quarter. While it’s still nowhere near the projections it shared back when it was going public, the recent sales report does show progress.

Lyft has locked in another AV partnership — this time with Tensor Auto. The plan, the companies said, is to deploy robotaxis in Europe and North America starting in 2027. Tensor Auto might not sound familiar, but Chinese robotaxi company AutoX might. Tensor Auto’s roots are from AutoX, although the San Jose-based company has told TechCrunch in the past that AutoX’s Chinese operations were fully divested.

Transportation includes infrastructure like bridges. Climate tech reporter Tim De Chant looked into Allium Engineering, a startup developing paper-thin stainless steel that could change how bridges are built.

Tesla revealed bare-bones versions of the Model 3 and Model Y, which start at $36,990 and $39,990, respectively. These “standard” versions are pretty stripped down. Senior reporter Sean O’Kane provides more detail here. 

A few things jumped out at me. For one, I was surprised this standard version doesn’t include Autopilot. Also, Tesla is really known for innovating, from its manufacturing process and software-first approach to its business model. But this wasn’t an act of innovation or even cleverness. It was merely stripping away — and the end result wasn’t the deep discounts that had been previously touted. Remember, Elon Musk was once pushing a $25,000 vehicle, a program that was later scrapped. 

Zero Motorcycles has moved its key operations from California to a new European headquarters in the Netherlands. The company told TechCrunch the move is designed to accelerate growth and sharpen focus on global opportunities.

If you’re in San Francisco later this month, come say hello. I’ll be at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, which will be held October 27 to October 29 at Moscone West. And there are a few transportation-related talks you won’t want to miss.

For instance, TechCrunch will be interviewing Uber chief product officer Sachin Kansal and Nuro co-founder and president Dave Ferguson about the evolving relationship between AI and mobility. The discussion is expected to cover how predictive models and computer vision are improving road safety, why last-mile delivery is an autonomy proving ground, and what it will take to bring AI-driven transportation to scale.

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交通科技 监管 自动驾驶 电动汽车 人工智能 出行服务 初创企业 融资 电池技术 政策法规 Elon Musk Tesla GM Joby Aviation Lyft Uber NHTSA eVTOL Robotaxi ADAS
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