Elon Musk accuses reporter of being ‘lobbyist’ over Tesla recall coverage

Elon Musk blasted an Related Press reporter, calling him a “lobbyist” who had “no integrity” over the wording of a information story about Tesla’s recall of tens of hundreds of sedans whose software program has been programmed to “run cease indicators.”

Tesla mentioned Tuesday it's going to recall 54,000 sedans after federal regulators flagged a self-driving performance that had the automotive decelerate and roll slowly by an intersection as an alternative of coming to an entire cease, as required by legislation in most states.

On Twitter, a Musk sympathizer posted a screenshot of the AP story written by Tom Krisher whose headline learn: “Tesla recall: ‘Full Self-Driving’ software program runs cease indicators.”

Musk, the world’s richest man and the founder and CEO of the favored electrical automotive maker, replied to the tweet, questioning the journalist’s credentials whereas failing to handle the truth that most states legally require drivers to come back to a full and full cease no matter site visitors.

“He’s truly a lobbyist, not a journalist,” Musk tweeted. “There are various who pose because the latter whereas behaving like the previous. No integrity.”

“Certainly, there have been no questions of safety,” Musk continued. “The automotive merely slowed to ~2 mph & continued ahead if clear view with no automobiles or pedestrians.”

Krisher declined remark when reached by The Publish. An AP spokesperson mentioned the wire service stands by Krisher’s reporting.

BURLINGAME, CALIFORNIA - MAY 20: Tesla cars are parked in front of a Tesla showroom and service center on May 20, 2019 in Burlingame, California. Stock for electric car maker Tesla fell to a 2-1/2 year low after Wall Street analysts questioned the company's growth prospects. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Tesla on Tuesday recalled 54,000 electrical sedans after federal regulators flagged a performance that stops the automotive from coming to a full cease at intersections.
Getty Photographs

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