The video makes a strong case for how AI can eliminate human error, but it often mistakes future potential for today's reality. It’s an optimistic look at technology that still needs to prove it can handle the messy unpredictability of real-world driving.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
Tesla Will Save Millions of Lives JUST LIKE THIS!Added:
What the heck?
>> With over 100,000 accidents on roads every single day on planet Earth, Tesla's FSD is already contributing to fewer of those. And on occasion, it's caught on camera for us all to see just how important the technology really is.
This is a clip from Dutch YouTuber Enzo, and he was testing Tesla's FSD when a car drove straight through the red light. You can see by their reaction just how impressed they were by the software and the sheer relief that dawned on them afterwards.
Holy.
>> We've seen many clips like this before, of course, where a red light runner risks killing everybody through sheer incompetence or total disregard for other people's lives. Even a Tesla driver in this clip. Unbelievable. We all know full well that distracted, inattentive drivers are everywhere and they can literally strike at any time.
It's rather shocking to get your head around this number, but every day on Earth, roughly 3,260 people die in fatal crashes. 3,260 people every day. That's about the same number of people who die from tuberculosis every day. And just like TB is a preventable and curable disease with the right treatment, so too are road traffic accidents. In a fully mature autonomous future, here's how Tesla's FSD will completely eliminate human error crashes. Zero distraction or fatigue. The system never checks a phone, never gets irritated in traffic, and never tires. It remains 100% alert and focused every single second of every day, year after year. superhuman 360 degree awareness with cameras covering every corner and neural nets processing billions of pixels per second. It will detect hazards like distant pedestrians, falling debris even, or erratic drivers far earlier and more reliable than any human ever could. Advanced predictive intelligence trained today on billions of miles, but in the future trillions of real world miles, it will anticipate the unpredictable. a child running into the street, a swerving truck, or an animal darting out, and act proactively before danger even develops. Flawless rule compliance. It will always obey traffic signals, yield perfectly, maintain ideal speeds, and follow distances and never make the careless mistakes that cause most accidents today. Lightning fast, calm emergency response. In critical moments, it will break, swerve, or stop with perfect precision and zero panic.
far faster and safer. And just as we saw in the earlier clip, complete immunity to human weakness. No alcohol, no drugs, no road rage, no sudden medical emergency. The car simply cannot be impaired. And finally, relentless self-improvement. Every mile driven by the fleet feeds the neural net, delivering continuous over-the-air software updates that make the entire system smarter, safer, and more capable with every passing week. And imagine if other manufacturers had the foresight to license Tesla's software and adopt the same hardware, the cameras, and the powerful onboard computer. No more fragmented systems or half measures.
Standardized, battle tested autonomy across brands could accelerate safety gains dramatically. As if legacy auto companies have foresight beyond their own unnecessary grills. For decades, they've been stuck in the old combustion engine mindset, protecting massive investments in factories, dealership networks, and decades old technology.
They're still obsessed with quarterly profits instead of shifting to an electric only softwaredefined future.
That short-term thinking is exactly why they've fallen so far behind. And unless they make radical changes fast, which they won't, many just won't survive the autonomous shift that's coming. But as the dinosaurs die out and the new players take over, and in a future where this technology matures, every vehicle on the road would operate with flawless coordination. Cars communicate intent instantly, maintain optimal spacing, and eliminate nearly all collisions caused by human error, which today accounts for over 90% of crashes. Intersections become seamless flow points instead of danger zones. Motorways run at peak efficiency with zero fatigue related pile-ups. Emergency vehicles get instant, clear paths. This isn't sci-fi.
It's the logical endpoint of Tesla's vision plus data approach, turning roads from one of humanity's deadliest environments into one of the safest. Of course, it's going to take a long time to replace all the dumb cars with smart ones. But if we want to avoid living in a world where 1.2 million people die every year on the roads, an autonomous future is the cure. and that emotional reaction you and I are both having towards the enjoyment of driving, what will we do? Well, I'll get to that in a moment. It's no secret for those paying attention to Tesla, but they are already heading towards becoming an autonomously car company. Think Cyber Cabs, Model Y and Model 3 variants without steering wheels, the Robo Van for bigger groups, and more products to come. Manual driving will be done purely for fun on racetracks just as people ride horses for recreation today rather than go to work on it. It might be decades away and unimaginable for some. But assuming life on Earth carries on nicely, it seems to be exactly where we are heading as people start to understand Tesla's monumental achievement with its full self-driving technology, the lives it is saving every day, plus starting to see autonomous robo taxes and cyber cabs in operation and becoming part of everyday life for those fortunate enough to live in such areas of the world. People's perception will start to shift. They'll see the massive benefits in safety, dramatically fewer crashes and deaths.
And like these chaps, notice those lifesaving moments piling up rather than the cars. People will also wake up and start to understand the massive benefits in affordability, the pay-per- mile rides that'll be far cheaper than owning a car. And then there's the convenience.
Think summoning a Tesla to your door as easily as ordering a takeaway whenever you need a ride. No more learning to drive, buying, ensuring, maintaining, parking, or fueling a personal vehicle.
For future generations, or even the young ones in American cities today, the very idea of traditional car ownership starts to look rather mad when these benefits get recognized. It'll be like owning a horse in the age of cars.
Nostalgic, but wildly inefficient for daily life. And the economics are game-changing, too. The Cyber Cab has no driver to pay, which slashes the biggest cost in traditional taxes or ride hailing. It's designed to be incredibly cheap to build, too. Targeted around $30,000 thanks to its simplified autonomously architecture with no steering wheel or pedals and the unboxed manufacturing process, which means once fully ramped up, these Cyber Caps will be literally running off the production line. On top of that, it's super efficient to run, especially on renewable energy. Tesla's VP of vehicle engineering, Lars Moravi, confirmed that the Cyber Cab is certified at just 165W hours per mile, making it the most efficient mass-produced EV ever, beating the Model 3's excellent efficiency by around 35%. That translates to roughly 0.025 cents per mile in energy cost at average electricity rates today. That's just under 2p per mile for us in the UK.
So for a 100 miles of travel, the cost is just $2.50 50 or under two quid. Do you get the disruption to come with electric autonomous vehicles yet?
Combined with a small battery and high uptime, it means robo taxi rides can be dramatically more affordable while still being highly profitable for the operators, i.e. Tesla themselves and Tesla owners who can add their vehicles to the robo taxi network. But if you think this autonomous future is a million miles away, nope. See David Moss, for example, not content with driving coast to coast in America, on 100% FSD from LA to Myrtle Beach, that's over 2,700 miles, with zero interventions, all verified, including parking and supercharging stops. He's now doing the same in Canada. No interventions whatsoever, streaming it live, tackling tougher roads, construction, wildlife, and all sorts using Tesla's FSD version 14.3.3. He and others have racked up well over 10 billion FSD miles altogether. These real world demonstrations show the tech isn't coming. It's already performing at levels that blows minds and proves unsupervised autonomy is closer than most realize. As always, I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments below. Do get involved. Like and subscribe and help support the channel by buying anything from my merch store.
You'll find all sorts of goods over there, including these awesome new t-shirt designs. If you know, you know.
If you missed what Jason Kamissa had to say the other day, click this video next. It's rather controversial. I'm Will. This is the Tesla Jigsaw. Thank you patreons. Thanks for watching.
Related Videos
OpenHuman VS Hermes AI: Who Wins?
JulianGoldieSEO
285 views•2026-05-29
Long-Running Agents — Build an Agent That Never Forgets with Google ADK
suryakunju
142 views•2026-05-30
5 Mind Blowing Omni Uses Cases
PaulJLipsky
1K views•2026-06-02
This computer is made from real human brain cells. And you can buy it.
Talktmsmedia
3K views•2026-05-28
BREAKING: Microsoft’s New Image Generating Model Beat Out GPT 1.5 and Nano Banana 2
aimmediahouse
122 views•2026-06-03
I Made the Same Anime Fight Scene in Every AI Video Generator
NobleGooseAnime
295 views•2026-05-30
Nvidia Bets Big On AI PCs | New Chip To Power Windows Laptops | Technology | AI Updates | N18S
cnnnews18
3K views•2026-06-01
I Tested NEW Opus 4.8 on Four Projects (Updated LLM Leaderboard)
AICodingDaily
298 views•2026-05-29











