Cruise, NHTSA

General Motors said it would no longer fund its Cruise robotaxi service as it seeks to focus autonomous vehicle development on personally owned vehicles. GM said Cruise employees would be ...
GM recently announced that it was dropping plans to launch a new self-driving robotaxi service, instead opting to refocus its autonomous vehicle technology efforts on personal vehicles. The ...
GM exits the global robotaxi business, saving $1 billion annually, after investing $10 billion in Cruise since 2016. Competition from Waymo and Amazon, coupled with operational challenges, led ...
In an announcement that’s shocked many, GM has said it will no longer provide funding for Cruise, its robotaxi service. Instead, the automaker says it’s pouring resources into autonomous ...
General Motors announced Tuesday that it would end funding for its Cruise robotaxi service. The automaker said it would shift its focus to the development of advanced driver-assistance systems ...
This story was originally published on Smart Cities Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Smart Cities Dive newsletter. General Motors announced Tuesday it will ...
DETROIT — General Motors Co.’s move Tuesday to halt funding for its Cruise LLC robotaxi program makes way for Silicon Valley rivals to take a firmer hold of the potentially multi-billion ...
GM CEO Mary Barra, with the ending of its Cruise robotaxi operations, made it clear that the automaker's growth priorities have shifted amid a broader, industrywide retrench to preserve capital.
New York (CNN) — General Motors is pulling the plug on its efforts to develop a fleet of driverless taxis and will focus on driver-assistance features that require a driver to be ready to take ...