GM said it sees a better business case in developing autonomous technology for personal cars rather than to develop robotaxis ...
Instead, the Detroit automaker will focus on development of partially automated driver-assist systems like its Super Cruise, ...
The Detroit auto giant says it's halting its investment in Cruise’s robotaxi project at $4.4 billion, and integrating its technology into its own vehicles' autonomous driving features.
For others still developing or operating robotaxis, GM's Cruise exit sends a clear warning, said Philip Koopman, a Carnegie ...
The news came by Slack message. Cruise CEO Marc Whitten, who took the top post in June, posted a message Tuesday afternoon in ...
General Motors is pulling out of robotaxis after eight years of pouring money into Cruise's commercial business.
The automaker is folding its San Francisco-based subsidiary into its in-house efforts to develop autonomous driving for ...
Automotive giant General Motors announced Tuesday that it would be pulling funding from its robotaxi firm Cruise, though it ...
GM only owns around 90% of Cruise, but the company has agreements with other shareholders that will raise its stake to more ...
General Motors is pulling funding from robotaxi company Cruise in order to focus on its own autonomous and assisted driving ...
GM announced Tuesday that it would no longer be using Cruise LLC funding for developing a robotaxi service, citing increased ...
GM pulls the funding for its robotaxi program to focus on autonomous driving for personal vehicles instead and plans to ...