Safety is autonomous driving's 'biggest story': Mobileye CEO

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Autonomous driving is in the front seat as one of the biggest tech narratives taking hold of the auto industry. After pedestrian accidents involving General Motors' (GM) robotaxi service Cruise, self-driving innovators like Mobileye (MBLY) remain dedicated to implementing safety features while sharpening their infrastructure.

Mobileye CEO and President Amnon Shashua sits down with Yahoo Finance's Akiko Fujita at CES 2024 (Consumer Electronics Show) to discuss Mobileye's aim to scale and broaden its driving systems for automakers. Shashua breaks down the narratives behind autonomous driving into three points: safety, rider productivity, and converting self-driving vehicles into major resources.

"Mobileye is active in all three stories," Shashua says, underlining the prominence of safety concerns in self-driving dialogues. "You want a system that observes 360 degrees everything around you, and has situational awareness of everything that happens around you. And then prevents you from making a mistake, prevents you from hitting a pedestrian, prevents you from if another car is getting closer to you, your car will offset."

Click here to view more of Yahoo Finance's coverage of CES 2024 this week, or you can watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live here.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

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AKIKO FUJITA: I'm Akiko Fujita here on the ground in Las Vegas at CES 2024, where there's certainly been a lot of conversation about autonomous driving. We are joined by Professor Amnon Shashua. He is the president and CEO of Mobileye, right in the center of that conversation. It's great to have you here today.

AMNON SHASHUA: Great to be here.

AKIKO FUJITA: You've had a string of announcements here on the ground, one of those being the driving experience platform, the DXP. You've kind of described it as a type of operating system--

AMNON SHASHUA: That's right.

AKIKO FUJITA: --for a car like Polestar. How does it work?

AMNON SHASHUA: So Mobileye is a supplier. We're talking about very complex systems that involve multiple cameras, about 11 cameras, imaging radars, lidars, very heavy compute. So it's a big chunk of the car. And the carmaker, naturally, wants to control important aspects of the driving experience, not treat it as a black box. On the other hand, for Mobileye, customizing a system per customer would be difficult for scaling.

So we found a way in which we can build a system, basically, build only the infrastructure of the system, which is one that fits all and allow the carmaker to write code on top of our system to control the driving experience.