TechTakata Failed To Alert US Road Authorities About Air Bag Rupture In 2003 U.S. road authorities revealed that Takata failed to alert them of an air bag rupture dating back to 2003. Takata was fined $70 million in the U.S. for failing to alert regulators of air bag defects in a timely manner.by Sumit Passary
TechUS Now Requires Self-Driving Car Companies To Pass Safety Assessment Letter: Here Are The 15 Points In A Nutshellby Aaron Mamiit
TechNHTSA Investigating Ford Explorer Exhaust Gas Odor: Possible Leaks Inside Vehicleby Horia Ungureanu
TechNHTSA Public Shaming On Twitter Will Call You Out If You're Texting And Drivingby Horia Ungureanu
NYC Road Safety Bill Wants 'Textalyzer' App Legalized So Cops Can Scan Drivers' Phonesby Menchie Mendoza
Car TechFBI Warns Of Car Hacking Risks: Increased Connectivity Leaves Vehicles Vulnerable To Cybersecurity Threatsby Kyle Nofuente
Car TechGoogle Self-Driving Car AI Can Legally Be The Only Driver, Rule US Vehicle Regulatorsby Alexandra Burlacu
Car TechMazda Expands Recall Of Cars Linked To Defective Takata Air Bags: Here's A List Of Affected Vehiclesby Angela Laguipo
Car TechBMW Mini Coopers Draw $40M Fine From NHTSA Over Safety Issues - Performance Requirements In Towby Alexandra Burlacu