General Motors’ Cruise on Thursday announced internally that it will lay off 900 employees or 24% of its workforce, the company confirmed to CNBC. The layoffs are the latest turmoil for the robotaxi ...
Cruise had an expensive but fairly successful operation going in San Francisco until October, when the General Motors-owned startup lost its state permits to run its driverless vehicles as paid taxis ...
At an investor conference last week, General Motors CEO Mary Barra announced that the company is scaling back its self-driving vehicle unit, Cruise. The move comes after California regulators pulled ...
San Francisco robotaxi company Cruise’s long saga over its car’s 2023 dragging of a knocked-over pedestrian has finally reached an end, with the company admitting to criminal behavior and agreeing to ...
Cruise has named its first “chief safety officer” as part of the company’s effort to rehabilitate itself following an incident — and ensuing controversy — last year that left a pedestrian stuck under ...
The Tuesday announcement that GM is halting additional funding of Cruise’s robotaxi development and repositioning its work to support the carmaker’s own self-driving tech closes a long and very ...
Cruise, the embattled GM self-driving car subsidiary, is laying off 900 employees, or about 24% of its workforce, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. The layoffs are part of a plan to slash costs and ...
The California Department of Motor Vehicles said Tuesday that it was immediately suspending the permits that allowed the tech startup Cruise to operate driverless cars, halting the operations of one ...
Ever wonder how cruise lines keep up with the insatiable demand for bigger and better ships? It turns out they have a trick up their sleeve that’s almost as impressive as building a new vessel from ...
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 25 (Reuters) - A General Motors GM.N Cruise robotaxi that struck and dragged a pedestrian 20 feet (6 meters) in an October accident made a number of technical errors that ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results