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Andrew J. Hawkins
GM will no longer sell your driving data to third-party companies.

The automaker was caught by the New York Times providing micro-details about its customers driving habits, including acceleration, braking, and trip length, to insurance companies. Clueless vehicle owners were then left wondering why their insurance premiums were going up. But now GM tells the Times it’s going to stop.

“OnStar Smart Driver customer data is no longer being shared with LexisNexis or Verisk,” a G.M. spokeswoman, Malorie Lucich, said in an emailed statement. “Customer trust is a priority for us, and we are actively evaluating our privacy processes and policies.”

No word yet on Kia, Subaru, and Mitsubishi, which also were reportedly sharing driver data with insurance firms.

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Wes Davis
Is your car snitching on your driving habits?

A driver’s insurance rate went up based on a 130-page report detailing his Chevy Bolt’s drives over six months, shared by GM with data broker LexisNexis through the OnStar Smart Driver program, reports The New York Times.

According to the Times, Kia, Subaru, and Mitsubishi also contribute to the LexisNexis data portal, while another company, Verisk partners with Ford, Honda, and Hyundai. Subaru says it only shares odometer data when authorized, while Ford says it will share data for usage-based programs based on a customer’s in-car menu confirmation.

Update March 12th, 2024, 2:42PM ET: Added details on the partnerships and what data is shared.

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Jess Weatherbed
Cruise is putting drivers into its robotaxis to resume services.

Bloomberg reports that Cruise is preparing to resume service on public roads “in the coming weeks” — possibly in Houston and Dallas, where the company previously operated — but with safety drivers in the seats. Service was suspended in October after one of its autonomous cars struck and dragged a pedestrian in San Francisco.

Cruise spokesman Pat Morrissey said in a statement:

“We have not set a timeline for deployment. Our goal is to relaunch in one city with manually driven vehicles and supervised testing as soon as possible once we have taken steps to rebuild trust with regulators and the public. We are in the process of meeting with officials in select markets to gather information, share updates and rebuild trust.”

Since the SF incident, Cruise’s license to operate in California was suspended, several top executives have left, and the company has let go almost a quarter of its workforce.

Dude, where’s my self-driving car?

When it comes to AVs, the landscape is littered with over-optimistic predictions and missed deadlines. What happened?

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Cruise finally has a chief safety officer.

Steve Kenner has held safety-related positions at Apple and Uber, as well as autonomous vehicle companies like Aurora, Kodiak Robotics, and Locomation. He’ll be in charge of making sure Cruise adheres to safety standards as it seeks to re-deploy its robotaxis in San Francisco and beyond. The GM-owned company is trying to rebuild its reputation — and get back its operations permit — in the wake of an incident in which a pedestrian was stuck and dragged by one of its autonomous vehicles.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
GM brings in a ringer to help with its EV battery problems.

Kevin Kelty was the former battery tech chief at Tesla during the infamous “production hell” Model 3 ramp. He’ll take the role of Vice President of Batteries and will report directly to GM President Mark Reuss. He worked at Tesla for 11 years and Panasonic for 15 years, so safe to say that if he can’t help GM get its stuff together, no one can.

The company has run in numerous hurdles scaling up its EV and battery making operation, including recalls and persistent delays related to automation on its Ultium assembly line. Suffice to say, Kelty will have his work cut out for him.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Maybe all the fuss about slower EV demand is way off?

Case in point: General Motors just inked a deal with South Korea’s LG Chem for $19 billion — yes, billion with a “b” — worth of EV battery material. That’s one of the largest EV supply deals of all time. The money will be spent over a decade and will fund the start of cathode production at the Tennessee plant operated by the two companies’ joint venture.

LG Chem said it will supply GM with half a million tons of cathode materials — nickel, cobalt, manganese, aluminum — which is enough to power over 5 million EVs with 300 miles of range each. Keep that in mind the next time someone tells you that EVs are just a fad.

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Electric Cars
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The Verge
Andrew J. Hawkins
Will GM take my advice and bring back the Chevy Volt?

It sounds promising, after GM CEO Mary Barra said in an earnings call this morning that the automaker would be bringing back plug-in hybrids.

Our forward plans include bringing our plug-in hybrid technology to select vehicles in North America.

Is she responding to the influential GM dealers who urged the company to get back into hybrids after EV sales growth slowed? Or is she an avid Verge reader who loves a convincing blog post written by a handsome editor? I’ll let you decide.

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Jess Weatherbed
General Motors is struggling to shift its EVs.

The company has taken a $1.6 billion hit related to unsold electric vehicles as growth across the EV market continues to slow. EV sales reached $2.1 billion in GM’s fourth quarter, up from the $2.0 billion reported last year.

The appeal for GM’s EV offerings is so low that some dealers are even pushing the automotive giant to get back into the hybrid market.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
EVs are dividing dealers.

Ford says half of its dealers in the US, or around 1,550, are opting to sell electric and hybrid vehicles in 2024. That’s down from around two-thirds of dealers that said they would sell EVs about a year ago.

GM found the same for its Buick dealers, 50 percent of whom are opting out of the brand’s decision to go all-electric. Money is playing a role, with GM telling its dealers they would need to commit to spend upwards $400,000 to prepare their stores to sell and service EVs. Chevy dealers aren’t being offered buyouts, meaning they’re stuck trying to sell the not-exactly-stellar-sounding Chevy Blazer EV.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
This reviewer’s Chevy Blazer EV left him stranded in rural Virginia.

Verge contributor Kevin Williams has a harrowing tale about his first test ride of the new Chevy Blazer EV in InsideEVs. First, the infotainment display disappeared. Then it came back but started flashing. Then the instrument cluster crapped out. And after plugging into a fast charger, the whole thing just kind of gave up.

I’m supposed to be getting the Blazer EV in a few weeks, and now I’m a little nervous! Do I need a chase car?

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The Verge
Richard Lawler
Cruise AV confirms nine leaders dismissed as its safety investigation continues.

Reuters reports GM-backed robotaxi startup Cruise told employees:

Following an initial analysis of the October 2 incident and Cruise’s response to it, nine individuals departed Cruise... we believe that new leadership is necessary to achieve these goals.

CEO Kyle Vogt already resigned, and now we know COO Gil West, policy officer Jeff Bleich and government affairs SVP David Estrada are also out.

Cruise was “days away” from green lighting robotaxis without a steering wheel in September. But after one of its cars struck and then dragged a woman in October, things have gone downhill. Now the industry wants help from Pete Buttigieg.

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The Verge
Wes Davis
GM thinks MotorTrend “misrepresented” its own executive’s comments about CarPlay and Android Auto.

Yesterday, we linked to a MotorTrend story paraphrasing GM infotainment head Tim Babbitt saying CarPlay and Android Auto can actually distract drivers. In an email to The Verge, GM communications director Anna Yu said his comments weren’t accurately reflected, calling Apple and Google “valued” partners. She added:

GM’s embedded infotainment strategy is driven by the benefits of having a system that allows for greater integration with the larger GM ecosystem and vehicles.

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Wes Davis
GM is ditching CarPlay for your safety.

MotorTrend paraphrased GM infotainment boss Tim Babbitt’s reasoning for ditching Android and Apple:

When CarPlay and Android Auto have issues, drivers pick up their phones again, taking their eyes off the road and totally defeating the purpose of these phone-mirroring programs.

If drivers were to do everything through the vehicle’s built-in systems, they’d be less likely to pick up their phones and therefore less distracted and safer behind the wheel.

It wasn’t clear if he said this with a straight face.

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Umar Shakir
Those GM-partnered EV charging stations feel inspired.

Skipping the gas station is one of the most freeing aspects of switching to an EV, but sometimes people miss it for the amenities — like using those squeegees to clean their windshields while refueling.

Well, say hi to this GM Ultium-branded gas-station-looking EV charging hub in Ohio, which looks like it’s part of the recently announced EVgo and Pilot partnership. It’s got the familiar canopy, accessories, and the pull-up-at-the-petrol-pump vibe.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Cruise on the chopping block.

General Motors’ willingness to lose a ton of money on self-driving cars is coming to an end, with the automaker planning to announce that it will slash spending on Cruise in a call on Wednesday. A pedestrian was seriously injured last month when a Cruise vehicle drug her 20 feet after a hit-and-run crash.

As I wrote last week, GM remained bullish on autonomous driving up until recently, even after its competitors reined in their own spending and scaled back their ambitions. Too bad it took a serious injury for GM to come to the same realization.

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The Verge
Richard Lawler
Cruise co-founder and CEO Kyle Vogt resigns.

His resignation follows an accident where a pedestrian who was struck by another vehicle became trapped underneath a Cruise robotaxi, which dragged her as it attempted to pull over. Rescuers needed to use the jaws of life to free her after Cruise disabled the vehicle.

The company recently announced one of GM’s lawyers would expand his role within Cruise. Then Motherboard reported Cruise’s first email to California’s DMV after the accident didn’t mention the whole dragging part. According to TechCrunch, Cruise engineering exec Mo Elshenawy will take over as president and CTO.

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Wes Davis
Cruise didn’t tell the California DMV the full story of its robotaxi’s pedestrian strike at first.

Vice Motherboard reported yesterday that Cruise’s email summary of the accident said the car “hard-braked but was unable to stop” before hitting a pedestrian. But it didn’t mention that the car then pulled over, dragging the person with it.

California’s DMV revoked the company’s self-driving license. Cruise then halted robotaxi operation, later expanded the pause to include supervised and manually-driven Cruise trips for safety review.