ThelVadam

joined 8 months ago
[–] ThelVadam@programming.dev 22 points 4 months ago

Our Lord Gaben is a Benevolent God.

[–] ThelVadam@programming.dev 24 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Weren’t there a few (ex?) employees that came forward shortly after the initial accusations surfaced and confirmed it was true?

I could be misremembering things but I also vaguely recall the initial accusations being backed up with receipts. Wasn’t there an Imgur album with a whole bunch of screenshots of conversations proving the accusations weren’t made up? Or am I confusing two completely different situations together?

I didn’t follow the situation super closely, and moved on and forgot about it until I saw this post.

Edit: looks like i was indeed wrong and confusing two separate situations.

[–] ThelVadam@programming.dev 12 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Current owner of 4 and a half years (love the car, it’s not perfect but then again nothing is, but the company is ass and don’t even get me started on the CEO).

In my experience, Tesla will only force an update if it contains a “recall” hotfix. The car requires to be connected to a WiFi network to download the update (it won’t use the onboard data even if you pay for the premium plan).

I’ve seen people claim that the car will automatically download an update on its own if it sits ignored long enough (even without WiFi or premium data plan), but I’ve had an update sit for 3 months and my car never attempted to download/install it on its own so I’m not sure what “long enough” means.

If you really wanted to, I’m sure you could completely prevent it from phoning home by pulling a fuse or finding the data antenna and disconnecting it, but I never looked into it myself.

Edit: My car also puts a 2min countdown on the screen when you start an update, that should give anyone plenty of time to leave the vehicle.