ReportWire

Tag: cruise

  • Cruise Ship Nightmare: Anna Kepner’s Cause of Death Revealed – LAmag

    New reporting suggests 18-year-old Anna Kepner may have died from asphyxiation caused by a chokehold aboard a Carnival cruise ship as the FBI continues to investigate her death

    The death of an 18-year-old Florida high school cheerleader found hidden under a bed on a Carnival cruise ship was reportedly caused by asphyxiation from a chokehold (or an arm across the neck), per a new report by ABC News. The FBI and the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner’s Office have not officially confirmed or made a statement. FBI agents discovered two bruises on the side of Anna’s neck, and reportedly, there were no signs of sexual assault and no drugs or alcohol found in her system.

    Anna Kepner, a senior at Titusville High School with aspirations to join the military, was discovered wrapped in a blanket beneath a bed covered by life jackets in a cabin she shared with her brothers on the Carnival Horizon. The ship had departed Miami on November 2, 2025, for a six-day Caribbean cruise and returned to port on November 8th.

    The preliminary findings indicate Kepner was possibly strangled in what investigators believe was a violent altercation, the sources said. The exact circumstances remain under active probe by the FBI, which is treating the case as a possible homicide. No charges have been filed as of Thursday.

    Kepner had left a family dinner early on November 6th and was captured on surveillance video entering the cabin she shared with her 14-year-old biological brother and 16-year-old stepbrother. Her younger brother returned later that evening, changed clothes, took photos around the ship, and later went to sleep in a bunk bed, unaware that his sister was already deceased and shoved under her bed. Her body was found the next morning by cleaning staff during a search prompted by the family.

    The stepbrother, whose identity is protected as a minor, has been identified as a person of interest and is staying with relatives of his biological mother. No arrests have been made of November 21st as this is an ongoing investigation.

    Lauren Conlin

    Source link

  • New Details Deepen Mystery in Florida Teen’s Cruise Ship Death

    Newly released records shed disturbing light on the death of 18-year-old Anna Kepner, found under her cruise-ship bed, exposing a troubled home life that may have played a role in the tragedy

    The mysterious and tragic death of an 18-year-old Florida cheerleader discovered crammed under a bed on a Carnival cruise ship in November has taken a darker turn, with court filings identifying her 16-year-old stepbrother as a potential person of interest and revealing her own 14-year-old brother slept just feet from her body without realizing it, per family attorneys this week.

    Anna Kepner, a Titusville High School senior with plans to join the military, was found wrapped in a blanket, covered with life jackets, beneath a bed on the Carnival Horizon Ship during a cruise that left Miami on November 2, 2025, and returned on November 8th. New details surfaced in Brevard County court filings, shedding light on a troubled family and home life.

    According to timelines developed by cruise ship security and surveillance footage, Kepner left a family dinner early on November 6, complaining of illness, and returned to the cabin she shared with her 14-year-old biological brother and 16-year-old stepbrother. The cruise ship footage showed her entering the room but never leaving, according to an emergency (family court) motion filed November 17th by Millicent Athanason, attorney for Kepner’s stepmother, Shauntel Kepner.

    The motion states: “She was last seen entering her room, and she never came out” and adds, “The respondent has been advised through discussions with FBI investigators and her attorneys that a criminal case may be initiated against one of the minor children of this instant action.” In other words, Kepner’s stepbrother is officially being questioned in her death.

    Credit: Brevard County Circuit Court

    The FBI, which is leading the investigation with Carnival and local authorities, has not released a cause of death or filed charges as of November 21st. The stepbrother, whose name is withheld because he is a minor, is now staying with a relative of his biological mother and has not been arrested. According to Kepner’s ex-boyfriend’s father in an interview with Inside Edition, it was a well-known fact that the step-brother was “infatuated” and “in love” with Kepner. It was also stated that Kepner was afraid of him because he always carried a knife. Per the ex-boyfriend’s father, Kepner’s parents were aware of all of this. Other chilling details about the night of Kepner’s death reveal that her 14-year-old brother returned to the cabin, changed clothes, took photos around the ship, and went to sleep, unaware that his sister’s body was hidden beneath the adjacent bed. He had assumed she had gone back out to enjoy the cruise.

    Kepner’s biological mother, Heather Wright, learned of the death days later through an online search. Wright has had trouble with the law and issues with drugs, and did not have a relationship with Kepner (who also detailed the lack of relationship with her mom on social media). “I found out through Google. I ended up Googling it, because the only information I had was that my daughter was on a cruise,” Wright said in an earlier interview with NBC. Wright was also told that she was not allowed to attend the funeral, but told Inside Edition that she would attend anyway, in a disguise.

    At a memorial service on Wednesday at The Grove Church in Titusville, step-grandfather Christopher Donahue, 53, questioned the cabin arrangement. “I don’t know why Anna was staying in a room with her stepbrother,” Donahue said. “All I know is that she went on that boat, and she never came back. … There are questions. I don’t think we’ll ever know.”

    The death has intensified years of family strife detailed in court records. The filings suggest that Anna’s father, Christopher Kepner, has been married three times. Tabitha Kepner, Christopher Kepner’s second wife, filed for divorce in March 2023, citing a “history of physical and mental abuse toward the minor children and toward the petitioner.” She sought sole custody. In 2024, Michelle Johnson, the mother of Christopher Kepner’s other children, sued Shauntel Kepner in small claims court to recover firearms, including a shotgun and rifles. Emails in the filing accused Shauntel of “manipulating and alienating” the children from their father. The case was dismissed on procedural grounds as Johnson missed a filing deadline. Additional court filings have revealed that Kepner’s father had allegedly had a prior issue involving a minor.

    Carnival Cruise Line previously issued a statement saying it is “fully cooperating with authorities” and offering condolences, but declined further comment, citing the active investigation. Anna Kepner’s cause and manner of death remain unknown.

    Lauren Conlin

    Source link

  • Murder at Sea?

    Devastated after the FBI bows out of the case, the family of missing cruise ship honeymooner George Smith vows to fight for answers.”48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger reports.

    Source link

  • The Takis Intense Nacho Tour: Zero Heat, Intensely Cheesy Cruise Experience to Set Sail First Weekend of August in Chicago

    The Free 21+ Pre-Festival Fan Experience Will Feature a Live Performance by BUNT.

    Takis® is turning up the flavor in a major way with Intense Nacho Tour: an intensely cheesy with zero heat immersive, high-energy pre-festival cruise launching in Chicago’s iconic lake. This experience brings together intense vibes, cheesy flavor, and nonstop entertainment.

    Takis® Intense Nacho is a cheesy, zero heat snack that delivers maximum taste without the spicy heat. Takis is throwing the ultimate bash on board a fully branded boat featuring an interactive immersive experience. The two-hour cruise, put on by award-winning experience producers Medium Rare, kicks off on Friday, Aug. 1, with a city cruise from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. CT for 300 21+ guests before the big fest kicks off later in the day.

    On board, guests will be treated to a live DJ set by viral DJ – BUNT., as well as unlimited Takis® Intense Nacho snacks, an open bar, and bites from a fully loaded Takis To Go Bar. Activations include a custom merch station, cheesy photo moment, free swag, and more, making for a flavor-packed cruise that’s just as intense as the snack itself.

    “Join us for the cheesiest and most over-the-top party as we celebrate our flavor Intense Nacho. This non-spicy cheese flavor is sure to delight our biggest fans. If you’re in Chicago, this is the event you won’t want to miss,” said Sandra Kirkpatrick, Senior Marketing Director for Takis®. “Takis is known for its intensity, and we’re bringing that energy to one of the biggest music weekends of the year in Chicago!”

    Fans can enter through July 29 for a chance to win a ticket to be a guest on the cruise at www.TakisIntenseNachoTour.com. No purchase necessary.

    Produced by Medium Rare, the creators behind Shaq’s Fun House, Dave Portnoy’s One Bite Pizza Festival, Guy Fieri’s Flavortown Tailgate, John Summit’s Expert Only Fest, and Travis Kelce’s Kelce Jam, this event brings Takis Intense Nacho Tour front and center during one of the country’s biggest weekends in music and culture.

    For more information, visit www.TakisIntenseNachoTour.com or follow @TAKISUSA on social for updates.

    DOWNLOAD OFFICIAL EVENT FLYER HERE

    About TAKIS®

    Takis® is the most well-known brand of Barcel USA, the U.S. snack division of Grupo Bimbo, the world’s largest baking company with operations in more than 30 countries. Barcel USA is an exciting, young and fast-growing consumer packaged goods company headquartered in Coppell, Texas, with a strong presence in the largest markets nationwide. Takis® snacks are not ordinary; they are the most intense snacks in the world. With different varieties such as Takis® Rolled Tortilla Chips, Takis® Stix, Takis® Waves, Takis® Chippz, Takis® Kettlez, Takis® Crisps and Takis® Hot Nuts. Visit us at www.Takis.us.

    About Medium Rare

    Lauded events, experiential, and management company Medium Rare works at the intersection of Sports & Entertainment, partnering with well-known athletes and brands to create iconic media properties including Travis Kelce’s Kelce Jam, Shaquille O’Neal’s Fun House, Guy Fieri’s Flavortown Tailgate, Daymond John’s Black Entrepreneurs Day, Sports Illustrated The Party, Rob Gronkowski’s Gronk Beach, and more. Creating and executing iconic IP and events that draw in millions of views and fans from around the world, Medium Rare also reaps industry accolades, recognized with six Webby Awards, Forbes 30 Under 30, Pollstar Next Gen, and Variety New Leaders, Inc. 5000, and more. For more info, visit www.Medium-Rare.com.

    Partnership Inquiries:

    Joe Silberzweig – Joe@Medium-Rare.com

    Media Inquiries and Talent Requests:

    Madisen Olsen – Madisen@RMG-PR.com

    Source: Medium Rare

    Source link

  • NT Maritime Partners With Princess Lodges and Westmark Hotels to Modernize Communications Across 9 Alaskan Hotels

    NT Maritime Partners With Princess Lodges and Westmark Hotels to Modernize Communications Across 9 Alaskan Hotels

    NT Maritime, formerly known as netTALK Maritime, is proud to announce a strategic partnership with Princess Lodges, a division of Princess Cruises, and Westmark Hotels, a subsidiary of Holland America Line, to revolutionize communications systems across Alaska. This partnership marks a significant step forward in unifying and upgrading their technology infrastructure with cutting-edge, next-generation solutions.

    Under this multi-year agreement, NT Maritime has revamped the existing PBX systems, deploying and managing a state-of-the-art unified communications platform across all properties. The project encompasses over 4,000 extensions distributed across offices and guest rooms, spanning nine hotels and approximately 20 office locations throughout Alaska and Canada.

    Staff and guests benefit from an enhanced suite of in-room communication options, including the ability to schedule housekeeping visits, place room service orders, and set notifications to be alerted when the Northern Lights appear—enabling them to fully immerse themselves in Alaska’s natural beauty from the comfort of their balconies.

    Additionally, a forthcoming update will provide hotel staff with access to high-quality voice communication, full-featured chat messaging, and other advanced management tools via a dedicated mobile application. This will ensure seamless, unified communication across all hotels, transportation hubs, and data centers.

    NT Maritime’s extensive experience in delivering advanced communication systems to ships at sea made it the ideal partner for this ambitious project. The same level of sophisticated, user-friendly communication technology that has been successfully implemented in maritime settings will now be available to both staff and guests at these land-based properties.

    “With the challenging Alaskan winter conditions, our proven technology and expertise in deploying communication solutions in demanding environments, such as cruise ships, positioned us as the perfect choice for this deployment,” said Garry Paxinos, CTO & CAIO of NT Maritime.

    This partnership underscores NT Maritime’s commitment to delivering innovative communication solutions that enhance the guest experience and streamline operations, no matter how remote or challenging the environment.

    About NT Maritime

    NT Maritime serves as a leading communication intelligence and IT Solutions provider, specializing in the development and operation of mission-critical communications networks. Additionally, it offers Low Earth Orbit Satellite connectivity, location services, contact tracing and access controls, along with cutting-edge Telehealth technologies tailored for the global maritime industry.

    About Princess Lodges

    Princess Lodges, a division of Princess Cruises, the largest cruise and tour operator in Alaska, is responsible for the operation of Alaska Land Tours and the land portion of Cruisetours. Founded in 1972 and headquartered in Seattle, Washington, the company offers a wide variety of Alaska land tours and Alaska train tours in conjunction with Princess’ Alaska cruises, providing visitors with the best ways to see the majestic “Land of the Midnight Sun”—by land and by sea. Princess also owns several luxury railcars known as Princess Rail.

    Source: NT Maritime

    Source link

  • Dozens of United Airlines passengers headed to Houston fall ill after international cruise

    Dozens of United Airlines passengers headed to Houston fall ill after international cruise

    HOUSTON – More than two dozen people on a United Airlines flight to Houston on Friday became ill while the plane was traveling from Canada.

    RELATED: United Airlines says it has regained some privileges that were suspended after problem flights

    United Airlines flight 1528 was flying from Vancouver, British Columbia to Houston. During the flight, 25 people became sick.

    According to the Houston Fire Department, the sick passengers reported symptoms of nausea.

    “About an hour and a half before we hit Houston, they ask for if you’ve been on this cruise ship, could you raise your hand,” James Snell recounts from his flight.

    All of the ill passengers were previously on a cruise. A total of 75 passengers flying on the plane were on that cruise.

    Firefighters and paramedics met the passengers as they landed at George Bush Intercontinental Airport following the five-hour flight from Vancouver, British Columbia.

    “Then all of a sudden, the flight attendant, she put on a mask, and the guy next to me is like, ‘What do you think’s going on?’ And I’m like, ‘Bro, I don’t know. You know? I mean, COVID, we’re all going to die.’ You know what I mean,” said Snell.

    Three people were “evacuated” from the airplane, but no one was taken to the hospital.

    MORE STORIES INVOLVING UNITED AIRLINES

    According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) the plane landed around 6:30 p.m.

    “Then firetrucks and ambulances started pulling up,” Snell said. “They didn’t hold us very long, maybe 45 minutes-ish.”

    Passengers aboard the airplane say that the pilot and flight attendants alerted them that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is investigating the illness.

    “This is where it got weird,” Snell said. “He [the pilot] got over the speaker, but he came out to us and he said, ‘Hey, in my 25 years of flying, I’ve never seen anything like this. We have been quarantined by the CDC. Nobody can exit the plane until the CDC lets us off.’”

    After being let off the plane passengers were screened by paramedics from the Houston Fire Department.

    “As soon as you got off, you got mobbed, wanting to know if you had any symptoms and did you want to be triaged,” Snell said. “But then they let us off and I thought, man, you’re letting us off in Houston airport. Like we’re going everywhere in the world. This is how it started the last time.”

    The last time refers to the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s what he and other passengers thought they could be dealing with.

    “We’re all trapped in this tube, and we’ve all lived through Corona. And I was just like, oh, come on. Not again,” Snell said.

    KPRC2 asked the FAA, CDC, Houston Fire Department and United Airlines for information about which cruise ship the passengers who got sick were on and for the illness, but none of the organizations would provide further information.

    According to information from the CDC, there have been seven outbreaks of illness on cruise ships this year.

    Cruise Line Cruise Ship Sailing Dates Causative Agent
    Celebrity Cruises Celebrity Summit 5/24-5/31, 2024 Norovirus
    Princess Cruises Sapphire Princess 4/5-5/7, 2024 Norovirus
    Royal Caribbean International Radiance of the Seas 4/8-4/22, 2024 Norovirus
    Silversea Cruises Silver Nova 3/31-4/16, 2024 E. coli
    Holland America Line Koningsdam 2/17-3/24, 2024 Norovirus
    Cunard Line Queen Victoria 1/22-21/6, 2024 Norovirus
    Celebrity Cruises Celebrity Constellation 1/3-1/12, 2023 Norovirus

    The most recent is a norovirus outbreak on the Celebrity Summit cruise ship.

    Norovirus is commonly known as the “stomach bug” and can lead to nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. It’s a highly contagious virus, but is typically not a severe illness and passes in a few days, the CDC reports.

    According to Celebrity Cruises’ website, the Celebrity Summit ship is currently sailing between Seward, Alaska and Vancouver, British Columbia.

    Vancouver is where the United Airlines flight full of sick passengers took off.

    KPRC2 asked Celebrity Cruises for more information about their outbreak and if it’s connected to the sick passengers that landed in Houston. We’re still waiting for an answer.

    Meanwhile, United Airlines tells KPRC2′s Gage Goulding that the plane is being pulled from rotation until it can be deep cleaned.

    UNITED AIRLINES STATEMENT

    “Several passengers who had been on the same cruise and did not feel well were on United Flight 1528 from Vancouver to Houston tonight. United Airlines is actively coordinating with health authorities to address the situation. As a precautionary measure, the aircraft will be removed from service and go through a deep cleaning before returning to service. Ensuring the health and safety of our passengers and crew remains our top priority.”

    KPRC2 asked the CDC for additional information. A spokesperson for the nation’s top disease agency said they would not provide an update until Monday.

    This is a developing story. Stay with KPRC2 for updates.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

    Gage Goulding, Michael Lemons, Ahmed Humble

    Source link

  • TechCrunch Mobility: Cruise robotaxis return and Ford’s BlueCruise comes under scrutiny | TechCrunch

    TechCrunch Mobility: Cruise robotaxis return and Ford’s BlueCruise comes under scrutiny | TechCrunch

    Welcome back tTechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here — just click TechCrunch Mobility — to receive the newsletter every weekend in your inbox. Subscribe for free.

    It was another wild week in the world of transportation, particularly in the EV startup and automated driving industries. Sure, Cruise got our attention by announcing a return of sorts. But there’s a lot more to read about, including Indian ride-hailing giant Ola exiting the U.K., Australia and New Zealand; a feature on a New York–based startup that wants to bring curbside EV charging to lamppostsUber Eats launching a TikTok-like video feature; and contract manufacturer Magna piloting humanoid robots developed by Sanctuary AI.

    Oh, one more thing — reporter Rebecca Bellan is back! I know readers missed her, so show her a bit of love by sending her some tips at rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.com.

    Let’s go! 

    A little bird

    Founders, investors, engineers, policy wonks and others tell us things. And we’re here to pass along the verifiable information that those little birds have shared with us.

    Got a tip for us? Email Kirsten Korosec at kirsten.korosec@techcrunch.com, Sean O’Kane at sean.okane@techcrunch.com or Rebecca Bellan at rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.com. If you prefer to remain anonymousclick here to contact us, which includes SecureDrop (instructions here) and various encrypted messaging apps.

    Deal of the week

    money the station

    Just a bunch of deals this week!

    Basemark, a Finnish company that developed AR and computer vision software used by automakers, raised €22 million ($23.6 million) in a Series B round led by ETF Partners. Other backers include Finnish Industry Investment, Constructor Capital, Business Finland, the European Innovation Council and private investors.

    Bumper, an automotive fintech startup sector, raised £2 million in a Series B extension round that included backing from Suzuki Global Ventures and Marubeni Ventures.

    Carrar, an Israeli startup that provides battery modules and thermal management systems for EVs, raised $5.3 million in a Series A round that included new investors Salida B.V., OurCrowd, and NextGear, as well as current backers Gentherm, NextLeap Ventures, Dive Digital and others.

    Exoes, a French-based startup that developed battery cooling technology for EVs, raised €35 million ($37.5 million) from BpiFrance and Meridiam Green Impact Growth Fund.

    HysetCo SAS, a startup that rents hydrogen-powered EVs to taxi drivers in Paris, raised nearly €200 million ($218 million) in a round led by Hy24. Raise Impact and Eiffel Investment Group also participated.

    Yoshi Mobility, a Nashville-based startup that developed an app to offer drivers preventative maintenance, virtual vehicle inspections and electric vehicle charging, raised $26 million in a Series C round led by General Motors Ventures. Bridgestone Americas, Universal Motors Agencies and Shikra Limited also participated.

    Notable reads and other tidbits

    ADAS

    The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said the driver of a Ford Mustang Mach-E who crashed into a stationary car in Texas in February was using the hands-free driver-assistance system known as BlueCruise. This is the first known fatality resulting from a crash involving the use of BlueCruise. The NTSB announcement came a day after the safety board announced it’s probing a second fatal crash near Philadelphia where Ford’s driver-assistance system may have been active.

    Autonomous vehicles

    GM’s self-driving car subsidiary Cruise is back. Sort of. The company is redeploying robotaxis, but not in its home city of San Francisco. Instead, Cruise is setting up shop in Phoenix and all of its autonomous vehicles will be driven manually by employees. Here’s the odd part: Cruise says it will be creating maps and gathering road information in Phoenix, a city where it has had a presence (and has driven autonomously) since at least 2020. That means it has mapped these roads before.

    Going all the way back to mapping has me a bit confused. Is this theater or does Cruise see a need to restart its entire process due to concerns about the underlying technology?

    Cruise has also petitioned California regulators to reinstate its permits to operate in San Francisco. Will we see the company mapping its hometown yet again, or will it jump back in with a robotaxi service?

    Meanwhile, Waymo officially launched paid rides in Los Angeles this week. We previously reported on California regulators’ approval of the Alphabet-owned company to charge for its robotaxi service in the city. The service is starting out small and will build based on demand and performance metrics, a Waymo spokesperson told TechCrunch.

    Electric vehicles, charging & batteries

    Elon Musk’s decision to green-light a robotaxi over an affordable EV might cost the company its lead, TC reporter Tim De Chant writes.

    Exponent Energy, the Indian battery-tech company that claims to have developed 15-minute charging technology, has partnered with auto manufacturer Omega Seiki Mobility to deliver a passenger three-wheel EV with those rapid-charging capabilities.

    Faraday Future is now grappling with two internal whistleblowers. Both former employees have filed lawsuits claiming the troubled EV company has been lying about some of the few sales it has announced to date. They also claim founder Jia Yueting has “weaponized” the EV startup’s HR department to retaliate against anyone who speaks up about these alleged misrepresentations.

    Lucid Motors delivered more EVs in the first quarter of 2024 than it has in any other quarter, though it set the record by a very slim margin.

    Tesla dropped the monthly subscription price of its “Supervised FSD” (formerly known as “FSD Beta”) to $99, down from $199, in a bid to get more dollars and data from drivers.

    Ride-hail

    Lyft and Uber said they will pause on their planned exit from Minneapolis after city officials decided to delay the start of a driver pay raise by a couple of months.

    Miscellaneous

    Check out this deep dive into Neural Concept, a company that’s using AI to help engineers make more aerodynamic vehicles for racing, automotive and aerospace industries.

    This week’s wheels

    Image Credits: Kirsten Korosec

    I’m back in a Mercedes EV, this time a 2024 Mercedes EQE 350 4MATIC. The model retails at $77,900, not including the destination fee. The version I drove came in at $97,615, due to all sorts of options, like a 10-degree rear axle steering system, head-up display, air suspension, AMG exterior and a $1,250 driver-assistance system.

    There are a number of improvements from the previous model year, including a new braking system, a heat pump to help improve driving efficiency in winter conditions, a 20-mile improvement in battery range, 20-inch wheels, power opening port door for charging and a better user interface (in my opinion) on the central infotainment.

    What I really wanted to try was the advanced driver-assistance system, and specifically the automatic lane change feature, which I had yet to test.

    Within the infotainment center, the driver can choose either “manual” or “automatic” lane change options. When the automatic feature is selected and the ADAS is on, the vehicle will make automatic lane changes without driver input. Here’s how it works. I was driving in the right lane on the highway with ADAS engaged. As the car approached slower traffic, an arrow appeared on the instrument cluster (see photo), the system turned my indicator on and then made the lane change. This can be overridden by holding the steering wheel and keeping it in the lane.

    My thoughts? The system worked seamlessly and I could see using it on occasion. The question is whether drivers want to cede that kind of control.

    Kirsten Korosec

    Source link

  • Cruise robotaxis are back in Phoenix — but people are driving them | TechCrunch

    Cruise robotaxis are back in Phoenix — but people are driving them | TechCrunch

    Cruise is redeploying robotaxis in Phoenix after nearly five months of paused operations, the company said in a blog post. The catch? The cars will be in so-called “manual mode,” so they won’t be driving themselves.

    Cruise will resume manual driving of its autonomous vehicles to create maps and gather road information in certain cities, starting with Phoenix, the company said Tuesday. The General Motors subsidiary already had a presence in Phoenix before it pulled its entire U.S.-based fleet last year following an incident in San Francisco that left a pedestrian stuck under and dragged by a Cruise robotaxi.

    Prior to that incident, Cruise had been announcing launches in new cities — including Dallas, Houston and Miami — at a startling pace. Critics accused the company of expanding too fast and cutting corners on safety.

    Now Cruise appears to be going back to basics, a sharp pivot away from the aggressive growth strategy the company was pursuing just last year. During its pause, Cruise continued testing its autonomous vehicle technology in simulation and on closed courses. Creating high-quality maps and gathering road information yet again should allow Cruise to meet elevated safety and performance targets, the company said in its blog post.

    Cruise has not announced when or where it will resume driverless operations. The company’s main operations were historically based in San Francisco, but Cruise lost its permits to operate there following the accident. Cruise began expanding its paid service area in the Phoenix area in August 2023. Alphabet’s Waymo — Cruise’s main competitor that’s still active in San Francisco — has operated a paid, driverless robotaxi service in the area since 2020 and last year doubled its service area in downtown Phoenix and launched driverless rides to the airport.

    This news is developing. Check back in for updates.

    Rebecca Bellan

    Source link

  • 8 Tardy Passengers Stranded After Cruise Captain Refuses To Let Them Board

    8 Tardy Passengers Stranded After Cruise Captain Refuses To Let Them Board

    Eight passengers on a Norwegian cruise, including a pregnant woman, a paraplegic traveler, and an 80-year-old who had been receiving emergency medical treatment at port, were not permitted back aboard the still-docked ship because they were late, leaving them to travel through six countries over land trying to meet back up with the cruise. What do you think?

    “Did the 15-minute orientation video mean nothing to these people?”

    Justine Osborne, Cloud Watcher

    “That just means I get to the buffet eight people faster.”

    Dawid Vu, Warning Designer

    “Would a round of free drinks help?”

    Lyndon Burch, Radio Technician

    Source link

  • Cruise passenger asked to ‘quiet down’ smashes cocktail glass in man’s face, feds say

    Cruise passenger asked to ‘quiet down’ smashes cocktail glass in man’s face, feds say

    This file photo shows a cruise ship. The ship pictured is unrelated to the assault that federal prosecutors say took place on Oct. 20.

    This file photo shows a cruise ship. The ship pictured is unrelated to the assault that federal prosecutors say took place on Oct. 20.

    Lisa Davidson via Unsplash

    Instead of quieting down on a Carnival cruise ship, a passenger smashed his cocktail glass into a man’s face and beat him during a theater show, federal prosecutors said.

    The man who officials said asked Michael Truman to “quiet down” twice before he was beaten needed about 19 stitches for cuts on his face, according to court documents.

    Truman, a 39-year-old resident of Portsmouth, Virginia, was accused of “loudly disrupting” the theater show as the Carnival “Magic” cruise ship was in the waters off Nantucket, Massachusetts, on Oct. 20, prosecutors said.

    When he refused to keep quiet upon his fellow passenger’s requests, Truman struck the man in the face with his glass as the man tried to get help from a cruise employee, according to prosecutors.

    Then, Truman got on top of the man and continued to hit him, prosecutors said.

    Now Truman has pleaded guilty to assault with a dangerous weapon, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia announced in a Feb. 15 news release.

    McClatchy News contacted Truman’s defense attorney, Nicholas Ryan Hobbs, for comment Feb. 20 and didn’t receive an immediate response.

    Cruise security said they found Truman inside his cabin, bleeding from his right hand, after the beating, according to an affidavit.

    He told security he was defending himself against the man, who he said asked him “to stop clapping so loud” during the theater show, the affidavit says.

    Truman claimed he hit the man after the man first swung at him, but he said he couldn’t remember exactly what he hit him with, according to the affidavit.

    Investigators found a broken “old fashioned/lowball cocktail glass” following the assault, the affidavit says.

    The broken cocktail glass.
    The broken cocktail glass. Affidavit

    Truman also told ship security “he did not know how he got the cut on his hand, claimed he had consumed three or four drinks of alcohol that day, and offered to stay in his room for the rest of the cruise,” the affidavit says.

    The wife of the man who officials said was beaten witnessed the assault and told investigators Truman appeared intoxicated, the affidavit says.

    Two days later, the cruise ship arrived at the Norfolk Cruise Terminal on Oct. 22, according to the court filing.

    McClatchy News contacted Carnival for comment Feb. 20 and didn’t receive an immediate response.

    Truman faces up to 10 years in prison, prosecutors said. His sentencing hearing is set for Aug. 29.

    Julia Marnin is a McClatchy National Real-Time reporter covering the southeast and northeast while based in New York. She’s an alumna of The College of New Jersey and joined McClatchy in 2021. Previously, she’s written for Newsweek, Modern Luxury, Gannett and more.

    Source link

  • Royal Caribbean’s newest cruise ship aims to reduce food waste with AI technology

    Royal Caribbean’s newest cruise ship aims to reduce food waste with AI technology

    Royal Caribbean’s newest cruise ship aims to reduce food waste with AI technology – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Amid environmentalists’ calls for the cruise industry to minimize waste, Royal Caribbean is introducing the use of artificial intelligence to tackle food waste on its latest and largest vessel, the “Icon of the Seas.”

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • GM admits to ‘numerous’ failings in Cruise robotaxi debacle that saw CEO embarrassed and pedestrian dragged 20 feet 

    GM admits to ‘numerous’ failings in Cruise robotaxi debacle that saw CEO embarrassed and pedestrian dragged 20 feet 

    General Motors Co. blamed poor leadership for mishandling its Cruise robotaxi crisis, an admission the company is hoping will help get its cars back on the roads.

    report by the law firm Quinn Emanuel, which was paid by Cruise, outlines how executives took an adversarial approach with regulators after one of its autonomous cars struck and seriously injured a woman. Federal prosecutors are now investigating the incident, which led Cruise to halt its fleet nationwide and undercut GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra’s vision to transform the carmaker from a 20th-century metal bender to a transportation company of the future.

    In a Thursday blog post, Cruise said it accepts the conclusions of the report. The company also disclosed that it’s facing probes from the Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission. It pledged to work with those investigations, in addition to having more robust processes for working with regulators. Kyle Vogt, former Cruise CEO, did not respond to a text message seeking comment.

    “The reasons for Cruise’s failings in this instance are numerous: poor leadership, mistakes in judgment, lack of coordination, an ‘us versus them’ mentality with regulators, and a fundamental misapprehension of Cruise’s obligations of accountability and transparency to the government and the public,” the report said. “Cruise must take decisive steps to address these issues in order to restore trust and credibility.”

    The report concludes that Cruise officials didn’t intentionally deceive regulators, but that their initial disclosures were inadequate.

    For GM and Cruise, making the report public is a crucial step to getting its robotaxis back on the road. It’s particularly important that the companies repair relations with the state of California, which suspended Cruise’s license to operate driverless vehicles after company officials misrepresented details of the October collision in San Francisco. Within weeks, Vogt resigned, and Cruise fired nine executives and cut almost a quarter of its workforce.

    It’s been an embarrassing saga for Barra who has touted its self-driving technology as a key pillar of GM’s plan to double revenue by the end of the decade. She’s pivoted by slashing spending on Cruise to contain losses and announcing plans to return billions to shareholders.

    The company faces a hearing on Feb. 6 to determine what it owes in fines to California.

    Connectivity Issues

    The fateful incident occurred on Oct. 2, when a Cruise vehicle named “Panini” ran over a woman who’d been struck by another car and thrown in front of the self-driving vehicle.

    The robotaxi stopped after detecting the person, but incorrectly classified the accident as a side-impact collision and initiated a pullover maneuver with the pedestrian pinned between its wheels. It dragged her 20 feet, causing severe injuries.

    Cruise reported the incident to California regulators and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, but in early communication with some of the regulators it didn’t disclose that the woman was dragged and only communicated that the car had stopped after hitting her, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg News.

    The report released Thursday found that on Oct. 3 Cruise shared a video of the incident with the San Francisco Mayor’s Office, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, California DMV and other government officials. In each of those meetings, it intended to play it in full. In some cases, connectivity issues prevented the video from being shown, but the company sent it to regulators in the weeks after those meetings, the report found.

    Cruise never verbally pointed out that the woman was being dragged, preferring to let the “video speak for itself,” the report says. Cruise also showed an incomplete video to the media, the report said, because the company was fixated on shifting blame to the human driver that first hit the pedestrian.

    “Cruise’s passive, nontransparent approach to its disclosure obligations to its regulators reflects a basic misunderstanding of what regulatory authorities need to know and when they need to know it,” Quinn Emanuel concluded.

    Mortifying Move

    California’s Department of Motor Vehicles suspended Cruise’s license on the same day GM reported its third-quarter earnings. On a call with Wall Street analysts hours earlier, Barra had touted the business’s potential.

    “We do believe that Cruise has tremendous opportunity to grow and expand,” she said. “Safety will be our gating factor.”

    California’s move was a huge blow for Cruise, which Vogt had said was on a path to $1 billion in revenue by the end of this year.

    Up to that point, Cruise was pushing hard to roll out its robotaxi service outside of the San Francisco market. Vogt was determined to establish operations, customer bases and name recognition across the country before its biggest competitor Waymo did, according to people present at management meetings.

    The people, who asked not to be identified describing private deliberations, likened the race to how Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc. competed in the early days of ride-hailing.

    There were signs the technology wasn’t working smoothly before the California authorities took action. One of its cars collided with a Toyota Prius in June of that year. That same month, a bug caused about a dozen Cruise vehicles to all stop in one intersection, blocking traffic for hours.

    GM executives, including general counsel Craig Glidden, pressed the startup on whether its processes were robust enough, people familiar with the matter said at the time. There was debate within Cruise about reducing the number of vehicles driving in parts of San Francisco to lower the odds of more incidents.

    Vogt dismissed the concerns and pressed on, the people said.

    Cruise then tussled this past summer with San Francisco’s city attorney and fire department over more incidents. Vogt told his staff that Cruise had to stand up to regulators the way Tesla Inc. CEO Elon Musk does, two of the people said.

    Big Aspirations

    Barra had big aspirations for Cruise when she acquired the business for $1.1 billion in early 2016. GM envisioned lowering the cost of rides in driverless vehicles below what Uber and Lyft charged and seizing a share of what former Cruise CEO Dan Ammann said was a $1.6 trillion market.

    In a 2017 presentation, Ammann said Cruise would marry Silicon Valley software with Detroit manufacturing chops that Waymo lacked. The company later unveiled an electric shuttle called Origin that was purpose-built to be a robotaxi, and Cruise hoped to run a service by the end of 2019.

    “We think it will change the world,” Ammann said at the time.

    Cruise managed to land multibillion-dollar investments from the SoftBank Vision Fund, Microsoft Corp., Honda Motor Co. and T. Rowe Price As of early 2021, the business was valued at around $30 billion.

    Those ambitions have since been scaled back. GM bought the Vision Fund out of its investment two years ago and has halted production of the Origin. Honda’s CEO suggested this month that it’s unlikely to launch a service with Cruise in central Tokyo by early 2026 as planned.

    Barra’s team still believes Cruise has good technology and plans to re-establish the business — with tighter control. Before October, GM wanted to give the company independence to maintain a startup culture, said people familiar with the matter.

    That’s no longer the case. Glidden, the general counsel, has been named the self-driving company’s co-president, Barra is non-executive chair and GM board member Jon McNeil is vice chairman of Cruise.

    GM’s shares rose 1.3% Thursday in New York.

    — With assistance from Dana Hull

      David Welch, Bloomberg

      Source link

    1. An exclusive look at the world’s largest cruise ship

      An exclusive look at the world’s largest cruise ship

      An exclusive look at the world’s largest cruise ship – CBS News


      Watch CBS News



      The world’s largest cruise ship, Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas, is days away from its maiden voyage. Kris Van Cleave got an exclusive look at what is in store for the first group of passengers.

      Be the first to know

      Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


      Source link

    2. Power outage restored after hitting Napier CBD as thousands of cruise passengers arrived – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

      Power outage restored after hitting Napier CBD as thousands of cruise passengers arrived – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

      Kolachi cafe on Emerson St lost most its power on Monday and was forced to close temporarily at a peak time. Pictured are owner Jaz Singh (left), along with his staff team. Photo / Gary Hamilton-Irvine

      A power outage took out supply to a chunk of Napier’s central business district during a busy retail period with passengers from two cruise ships in town.

      The unscheduled outage hit late morning on Monday and was caused by a suspected cable fault, according to Unison.

      The outage started at 10.41am and power began to return to some businesses by 11.15am, but power supply continued to fluctuate in the city for the next 45 minutes.

      The outage affected about 200 properties on Dickens St, Dalton St, Station St, Emerson St, Hastings St and Marine Parade, among others.

      Some shops and eateries were without power for over an hour. All properties had power returned by noon.

      The outage hit as passengers from two cruise ships, the 3100-passenger cruise ship Grand Princess and the 2770-passenger Resilient Lady, were in town.

      The owner of Kolachi cafe on Emerson St, Jaz Singh, said it was tough timing, and they were forced to close while the power was out and eventually opted not to reopen for the day as it was one of the last areas to have power restored.

      “We have no other option than to close at this point because we don’t know when power is returning,” Singh said during the outage, which hit his cafe for more than an hour.

      AdvertisementAdvertise with…

      Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

      MMP News Author

      Source link

    3. This 9-month cruise sounds like an extended NIGHTMARE (6 Photos)

      This 9-month cruise sounds like an extended NIGHTMARE (6 Photos)

      What’s better than spending 9 months at sea with hundreds of people you don’t know? Many, many, many things. Like, soooo many things. Probably most things. But to some people, I guess it sounds like a dream come true and that’s why they bought passage on Royal Caribbean’s Serenade of the Seas cruise liner.

      Camry

      Source link

    4. Set Sail for Holiday Magic on Santa’s Fireworks Cocktail Cruise!

      Set Sail for Holiday Magic on Santa’s Fireworks Cocktail Cruise!


      Get ready to jingle all the way on Saturday, December 16th, as the Anita Dee II transforms into a festive paradise for the Santa’s Fireworks Cocktail Cruise! ChicagoCruiseEvents.com is pulling out all the stops for a holiday celebration you won’t want to miss.

      A Night of Enchantment:

      Located at Burnham Harbor (1559 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605), the Anita Dee II is the place to be from 7:30 pm to 10:30 pm CST. Picture this: dazzling views of Chicago’s skyline, iconic landmarks, and the harbor from the magnificent Lake Michigan.

      Decked Out for Fun On Santa’s Cocktail Cruise

      This 3-story luxury yacht is not your average party venue. With two indoor, climate-controlled decks and a third open-air deck, it’s ready to host a night of holiday revelry. Dance the night away with Chicago’s hottest DJ providing the soundtrack for a memorable evening.

      Cheers to Good Times: What’s a party without drinks? The fully stocked bars onboard are primed and ready to serve up your favorite beverages. Whether you’re in the mood for a classic cocktail or a festive concoction, the libations will be flowing.

      Dress to Impress, or Don’t Dress at All

      Okay, maybe not the latter, but there’s a semi-formal dress code in effect. Leave the athletic wear and hats behind, and show up in your holiday best. It’s a celebration, after all!

      Time to Board the Fun Train: Boarding begins 45 minutes before the cruise sets sail, and trust us, you don’t want to miss the boat—literally. Gates close 10 minutes before departure, and latecomers might find themselves at the end of the standby line. No refunds for fashionably late entrances, folks!

      Safety First: COVID protocols are in play, so grab that festive face mask for the indoor portions of the boat. And just a heads up, the cruise is strictly for adults (21+), so leave the kiddos at home.

      Parking and Logistics Drama: Our advice? Skip the headache of parking and opt for public transportation or a trusty rideshare. But if you must drive, check out the map for parking options—it’s like a treasure hunt, but with parking spaces.

      Questions, Anyone?: Got burning questions? Check out the FAQs for all the deets. From dress code dilemmas to whether you can bring your grandma’s fruitcake, we’ve got you covered.

      Map Your Course to Burnham Harbor: If you’re wondering where the Anita Dee II is hiding, it’s at Burnham Harbor. Follow the provided driving or drop-off instructions, and you’ll be there in no time.

      Don’t miss out on the holiday hullabaloo! Snag your tickets now at www.ChicagoCruiseEvents.com or hit up Info@ChicagoCruiseEvents.com, 312-500-0389 for more info. Get ready to sleigh the night away!



      Pia

      Source link

    5. CEO, co-founder of Cruise Kyle Vogt resigns from position

      CEO, co-founder of Cruise Kyle Vogt resigns from position

      DMV suspends Cruise’s permits determining they are not safe for public’s operation


      DMV suspends Cruise’s permits determining they are not safe for public’s operation

      03:27

      SAN FRANCISCO — The CEO of Cruise announced on Sunday he was stepping down from the role. 

      “The last 10 years have been amazing, and I’m grateful to everyone who helped Cruise along the way,” CEO and co-founder Kyle Vogt posted on X. “The startup I launched in my garage has given over 250,000 driverless rides across several cities, with each ride inspiring people with a small taste of the future.”

      Vogt’s resignation comes less than a month after the autonomous car company paused its driverless robotaxi operations nationwide. The pause happened two days after the California DMV suspended its driverless testing permits in the state.

      The suspension happened due to an incident in October where a Cruise robotaxi dragged a pedestrian that had been struck by another vehicle in San Francisco.

      Cruise’s permit for testing of the vehicles with a safety driver inside was not affected by the suspension.

      Cruise also recently announced layoffs among its contract employees who worked on the ride-hailing service’s fleet of autonomous vehicles.

      The workers laid off included support staff who clean, charge and service the robotaxis, as well as customer service workers.

      The layoffs came after its fleet of vehicles was recalled for a software update, which was prompted by the same incident that saw its testing permit suspended.

      Cruise, headquartered in San Francisco, is a subsidiary of General Motors and also operates in Phoenix, Arizona, and in the Texas cities of Austin and Houston.

      Source link

    6. Cruise’s mea culpa and everything that stood out at the LA Auto Show | TechCrunch

      Cruise’s mea culpa and everything that stood out at the LA Auto Show | TechCrunch

      The Station is a weekly newsletter dedicated to all things transportation. Sign up here — just click The Station — to receive the newsletter every weekend in your inbox. Subscribe for free.

      Welcome back to The Station, your central hub for all past, present and future means of moving people and packages from Point A to Point B.

      The LA Auto Show was this week and while it no longer has the cache of pre-COVID days, there were still some notable news that came out of the event. TechCrunch reporter Harri Weber was on the scene helping me cover the news. One of the biggest announcements had nothing to do with a vehicle reveal. Nope, it was Amazon declaring it was now going to sell cars online, starting with Hyundai.

      Other coverage included the Lucid Gravity SUV debut and a handy roundup that covered the tech, EVs and other fun stuff that got our attention.

      Alrighty, let’s dive in!


      Want to reach out with a tip, comment or complaint? Email Kirsten at kirsten.korosec@techcrunch.com

      Reminder that you can drop us a note at tips@techcrunch.comIf you prefer to remain anonymousclick here to contact us, which includes SecureDrop (instructions here) and various encrypted messaging apps.

      Micromobbin’

      Upway, the French refurbished e-bike marketplace, has raised $30 million at an increased valuation. Normally this piece of news would go in our deals section below, but I wanted to ponder on the meaning of this up round.

      Upway is present in multiple countries in Europe and recently expanded to the U.S. It takes in used e-bikes from reputable and desirable brands, fixes them up, and sends them out to customers at a decent price. Getting this business right requires smart supply chain and logistics management, and it appears Upway is on the right path. In today’s capital markets, it’s not as easy to get new investors if you’re not proving out business sustainability.

      Zooming out to the macro environment, e-bikes aren’t going anywhere. In fact, as more people buy new bikes, the market for used ones grows. And with all the e-bike battery fires we’ve seen, a company offering safely refurbished e-bikes seems like a pretty good deal.

      — Rebecca Bellan

      Deal of the week

      money the station

      Just a roundup this week!

      Divergent Technologies, a Torrance, Calif.-based startup that developed an industrial digital manufacturing system, raised $230 million in a Series D funding round led by a $100 million investment from Hexagon AB. The round also included participation from new and existing institutional and family office investors.

      Gravity, an EV infrastructure startup, raised $13 million in a seed round led by GV (Google Ventures).

      GM acquired key Tesla gigacasting supplier Tooling & Equipment International, Reuters reported.

      InDrive, the “bid-based” ride-hail platform popular in Latin America and Asia, launched a venture and merger and acquisition division named New Ventures to invest up to $100 million in startups within emerging markets over the next few years. The $100 million won’t come from a fund, exactly. The plan is to invest the money “over the next few years by making annual allocations of investment capital from our balance sheet, starting in 2024,” Andries Smit, vice president of New Ventures told TechCrunch.

      Luup, a Tokyo-based shared e-scooter startup, raised $24 million to expand its charge ports to 10,000 by 2025, up from around 4,900 today.

      Revolv, an electric commercial fleet company based in San Francisco, raised $25 million in equity project financing  from Greenbacker Capital Management.

      Shekel Mobility, a B2B auto dealers marketplace in Africa, raised more than $7 million in funding that was comprised of $3.2 million in equity and over $4 million in debt. Ventures Platform co-led the round alongside MaC Venture Capital. Other investors include Y Combinator, Rebel Fund, Unpopular Ventures, Maiora Capital, PageOne Lab Inc., Phoenix Investment Club, Heirloom VC, Pioneer Ventures and other angel investors. Meanwhile, Zedvance, VFD Microfinance Bank, Zenith Bank and Fluna, amongst others, provided the debt component.

      Tenet, an EV financing startup based in New York, raised $10 million in Series A funding round led by Nyca Partners. Assurant Ventures and Giant Ventures also participated.

      Notable reads and other tidbits

      Autonomous vehicles

      Texas is poised to be the next hotbed for autonomous vehicles and a likely regulatory battleground. AVs aren’t regulated in the state, but as robotaxis incidents rise, cities may turn to one weapon that California doesn’t have, TechCrunch reporter Rebecca Bellan writes.

      Meanwhile, GM has taken the wheel at its troubled AV subsidiary Cruise, going as far as inserting one of its own executives to head up the self-driving car company’s legal and policy, communications and finance teams.

      A number of Cruise employees have reported to TechCrunch that morale is at a new low point thanks to a decision by parent company GM to suspend its employee share-selling program. But wait! On Saturday, Cruise co-founder and CEO Kyle Vogt sent an email to employees (which TechCrunch has seen) apologizing to employees, taking responsibility and reversing course, sort of, on the share sale. He opened with:

      “I know the news about changes to our RLO program was extemely difficult to hear, and that there were many unanswered questions. We left you with concerns about your colleagues, your careers, and your personal finances. That’s the last thing I want for anyone, and I am truly sorry.”

      Vogt went on to say that the company was working on a way to conduct a new tender offer that would mitigate potential tax obligations.

      He later wrote that “as CEO, I take responsibility for the situation Cruise is in today. There are no excuses, and there is no sugar coating what happened.”

      Earnings

      It was a slower earnings week for transportation. Still, there were a couple of noteworthy ones.

      It’s still not looking good for Bird, which closed out the quarter after getting delisted from the stock market with a $19.8 million loss. Bird’s going concern warning is very much still in effect — the company has incurred recurring losses and negative cash flows since its inception and has accumulated a deficit of $1.6 billion as of September 30, 2023.

      Revenue remains light, despite the Spin buy, at $54.3 million (down from $72.8 million in Q3 2022). Now we’re coming into winter, when cash flows will drop even more significantly. Bird closed out the quarter with $10.2 million in cash and cash equivalents, which by my calculations gives it another 9 months with its current cash burn. The company says it won’t be able to meet obligations over the next 12 months.

      Gogoro, too, is still feeling its previous stings of currency conversions. Its revenue of $91.8 million for the quarter is down 10.2% YoY. However, battery swapping service revenue of $33.6 million is up 10.4% YoY. The battery swapping giant closed Q3 with a net loss of $3.1 million, down from a net income of $56.4 million in the same quarter last year. On an adjusted basis, Gogoro reported EBITDA of $13.1 million, which is up from $9.2 million in Q3 2022.

      Fisker also had a troubling third quarter, reporting a wider-than-expected loss.

      Electric vehicles, charging & batteries

      Arrival, the once buzzy EV startup that went public via a merger with a blank check company, secured a $50 million bridge loan —funds that will keep it afloat long enough to explore a potential sale.

      Cadillac debuted the Optiq, an entry-level compact crossover EV that will slot below the Lyriq

      Candela’s electric hydrofoiling ferry, which is now in production, took its first “flight” in Stockholm.

      Exxon wants to drill enough lithium out of Arkansas to power 1 million EVs per year.

      GM absorbed BrightDrop, the wholly-owned commercial EV subsidiary, a change that included ousting its CEO. Does the same fate await Cruise, another one of its subsidiaries?

      Mercedes plans to build around 30 fast-charging hubs at Buc-ee’s locations throughout the South. TC+ reporter Tim de Chant digs into why supersize convenience stores might be key to unlocking EV fast charging?

      Redwood Materials will supply Toyota with cathode material and anode copper foil for battery cells produced at the automaker’s $13.9 billion factory in North Carolina that’s slated to go into production in 2025.

      Tesla hits reverse on its previous threat to sue Cybertruck resellers. Also, an upgraded Tesla Cyberquad for kids is back on sale after safety recall.

      Future of flight

      Archer Aviation signed a memorandum of understanding with Air Chateau, a private aviation operator in UAE, at a value of around $500 million for the planned purchase of up to 100 of Archer’s Midnight eVTOLs.

      Joby Aviation and Volocopter gave the public a vivid glimpse of what the future of aviation might look like this weekend, with both companies performing brief demonstration flights of their electric aircraft in New York City.

      Zipline hit an important milestone in its U.S. operations. The Federal Aviation Administration approved Zipline for flying its autonomous drone without line of sight visual observers. Soon after the FAA lifted this requirement, Zipline flew its Platform 1 aircraft in the Salt Lake City area without the previously-required visual observers. Zipline is now flying in Utah without this requirement and will soon expand that approach across its U.S. operations, according to the company.

      In-car tech

      Feds want speed reduction tech in every new car. Are American drivers ready?

      A software update bricked Rivian infotainment systems. About 3% of its vehicles were impacted by the issue, which is being addressed with an over-the-air software update.

      Ride-hailing

      Uber is introducing new features geared toward addressing the issues of unfair deactivations that ride-hail and delivery drivers often face.

      Kirsten Korosec

      Source link

    7. Signal details costs of keeping its private messaging service alive | TechCrunch

      Signal details costs of keeping its private messaging service alive | TechCrunch

      What price privacy? End-to-end encrypted (E2EE) messaging app Signal has put out an interesting overview of the costs required to develop and maintain its pro-privacy systems which shield user data from tracking by default.

      The blog post, penned by Signal president Meredith Whittaker and developer Joshua Lund, reveals it’s currently spends around $14 million per year on infrastructure to run the private messaging service; and a further $19 million per year on staff costs — making a total of circa $33M to keep the lights on and its “many millions” of users’ messages safe from unintended eyes.

      It also projects the cost of running its service will rise to around $50M by 2025.

      The post doesn’t break out a figure for active users for the service. But it’s likely to be in the tens of millions. (A Business of Apps‘ estimate suggested Signal had around 40M monthly active users in 2021; while App Annie data we reported on at the start of that year suggested it had around 20M users at the end of 2020 — prior to a surge in usage driven by an exodus of WhatsApp users concerned about changes to the Meta-owned messaging app’s privacy policy.)

      Per the post, just 50 full-time staff keep the messaging service running, while also conducting research to keep pushing the envelop on privacy protection and — in the case of Whittaker at least — having what looks like a full-time job in and of itself in public policy advocacy that’s seen her shuttling around the world in recent months to defend privacy rights and try to fend off government incursions targeting E2EE.

      The post conveys a clear message: Going against the tech industry grain by keeping users safe from surveillance is an expensive — but vital — enterprise.

      Signal is a nonprofit so it’s not a money-making kind of enterprise. But of course it still needs to have enough funds coming in to cover costs. And, clearly, costs are rising as usage increases. Which means it needs to be proactive about finding ways to increase revenue that don’t compromise its fundamentally pro-user stance.

      As the blog post details, Signal goes much further in safeguarding user privacy than even the mainstream messaging apps that have implemented its E2EE protocol (such as Meta-owned WhatsApp). “To take one example, profile pictures and profile names are always end-to-end encrypted in Signal,” it writes. “This means that Signal does not have access to your profile name or chosen profile photo. This approach is unique in the industry. In fact, it has been more than six years since we first announced this additional layer of protection, and as far as we know none of our competitors have yet adopted it.

      “Other messengers can easily see your profile photo, profile name, and other sensitive information that Signal cannot access. Our choice here reflects our staunch commitment to privacy but it also means that it took Signal more effort to implement support for profile photos. Instead of a weekend project for a single engineer, our teams were required to develop new approaches and concepts within the codebase (like profile keys), which they worked to roll out across multiple platforms after an extended testing period.”

      Disclosing how much it (already) spends annually on essential stuff like storage ($1.3M), servers ($2.9M), registration fees ($6M), bandwidth ($2.8M), other infrastructure needs like disaster recovery ($700k), as well as the aforementioned $19m on staff (covering wages, taxes and related HR costs), looks intended to (gently) jolt the audience — and, hopefully, get a few more users reaching into their wallets to chip in and help ensure a gold-standard private messaging choice.

      “To put it bluntly, as a nonprofit we don’t have investors or profit-minded board members knocking during hard times, urging us to ‘sacrifice a little privacy’ in the name of hitting growth and monetary targets. This is important in an industry where ‘free’ consumer tech is almost always underwritten by monetizing surveillance and invading privacy,” it warns.

      “Instead of monetizing surveillance, we’re supported by donations, including a generous initial loan from Brian Acton. Our goal is to move as close as possible to becoming fully supported by small donors, relying on a large number of modest contributions from people who care about Signal. We believe this is the safest form of funding in terms of sustainability: Ensuring that we remain accountable to the people who use Signal, avoiding any single point of funding failure, and rejecting the widespread practice of monetizing surveillance.”

      As the post also details, even alternative tech tools like Signal must pay into the coffers of industry giants who own and operate essential app infrastructure like cloud computing as well as, typically, also being in the data capture and surveillance business.

      Natasha Lomas

      Source link

    8. GM inserts exec at Cruise as safety review expands, manual self driving paused | TechCrunch

      GM inserts exec at Cruise as safety review expands, manual self driving paused | TechCrunch

      General Motors is taking a more active role in shaping the safety culture at Cruise, following a string of incidents that prompted California regulators to suspend permits that allowed the self-driving car subsidiary to operate commercially in the state. The legacy automaker is inserting one of its own executives, who is also a Cruise board member, to head up the self-driving car company’s legal and policy, communications and finance teams.

      Craig Glidden, GM’s EVP of legal and policy and a Cruise board member, will come on as chief administrative officer at Cruise. Glidden will oversee work streams around transparency and community engagement, according to Cruise.

      Cruise said it will also pause all supervised and manual autonomous vehicle operations in the U.S., which the company says affects some 70 vehicles. Cruise had already voluntarily paused all of its driverless operations in cities across the country, including Houston, Austin and Phoenix, in order to “rebuild public trust” following after an October 2 event that left a pedestrian, who had been hit by a human-driven vehicle, run over and dragged 20 feet by a Cruise robotaxi.

      “This orderly pause is a further step to rebuild public trust while we undergo a full safety review,” according to a blog post from the company announcing the changes.

      In early November, Cruise hired consulting firm Exponent to conduct a technical root causes analysis of the October 2 incident. The company said Tuesday that remit will expand to include a comprehensive review of all of Cruise’s safety systems and technology.

      The Cruise board also said it would hire a third-party safety expert in the coming weeks to fully assess the company’s safety operations and culture.  The moves follows the lead of other AV companies, including those that have faced scrutiny over safety practices. Uber ATG, the ride-hailing company’s former self-driving vehicle unit, hired former National Transportation Safety Board chairman Christopher Hart to advise the company on its safety culture after the May 2018 fatal self-driving car crash in Arizona.

      The outside safety expert is in addition to last week’s announcement the Cruise will hire a chief safety officer to report directly to Vogt. Other AV companies such as Aurora have dedicated chief safety officers. Cruise did not respond in time to confirm whether the company had a dedicated executive overseeing safety at the company previously.

      A survey that Blind, an anonymous forum for verified employees, conducted for TechCrunch found that half of Cruise employees are either not at all confident (32%) or only slightly confident (18%) in Cruise’s safety culture. Over three-quarters of the 136 Cruise employees surveyed from November 7 to November 8 said they believed Cruise was trying to scale too quickly.

      The changes come a day after Cruise and GM held a board meeting to discuss next steps for the embattled AV company. CEO Kyle Vogt had warned staff last week that layoffs would be coming, and then the company began letting go contract workers.

      Rebecca Bellan

      Source link