Germany's Federal Motor Authority recently sent letters to Tesla drivers reminding them that the "Autopilot" function is for driver assistance, not replacement. Now, Tesla is being warned against advertising the feature:
German Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt has asked Tesla to stop advertising its electric vehicles as having an Autopilot function as this might suggest drivers' attention is not needed, his ministry said on Sunday.
A spokeswoman for the ministry, confirming a report in the daily Bild am Sonntag (BamS), said the Federal Motor Transport Authority (KBA) had written to Tesla to make the request. "It can be confirmed that a letter to Tesla exists with the request to no longer use the misleading term Autopilot for the driver assistance system of the car," she said in a written response to a Reuters' query.
(Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 17 2016, @09:13PM
> I applaud the Germans for standing up in this one instance, but I'd like all vendors to be held to the same standards.
They mostly are. Europe (and the UK) have much more strict requirements for ads than the US does.
I'm too lazy dig up stories about other enforcement actions, but here's a EU primer:
http://ec.europa.eu/consumers/consumer_rights/unfair-trade/false-advertising/index_en.htm [europa.eu]