Autonomous cars may soon have the ability to take over if they detect a sleepy driver.
The move is part of an attempt to accelerate Takata's decision-making and unify its response on the recalls of the faulty air bags.
The U.S. has seen a record year in auto-safety recalls, but there are also far more safe cars to choose from.
Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk stated that the update was delayed by "several crisis issues."
The car, which lacks a steering wheel, will be tested on public roads in 2015.
General Motors has developed contingency plans in case recalls of potentially lethal Takata-made air bag inflators widens.
The Boeing Black encrypts disk data and all communications, BlackBerry says.
For more than a half-century Cuba’s American-made vehicles have taken an isolated beating. Now they may be easy pickings for classic car lovers.
New car models featuring Google’s new car operating system will be unveiled next month at CES.
Over the past few years automakers have taken center stage at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Here's what to look for this time.
Ford expands recall of Mustang and GT models with faulty Takata air bags.
FCA US LLC, the new name for the Chrysler Group LLC, separates the brand from the storied company name established in 1925.
The British luxury carmaker is touting camera technology that allows drivers to see through the "pillars."
Apps that use GPS to track vehicle movements will help ensure safer rides for women on the subcontinent, industry executives claim.
The German automaker will show off a BMW i3 that drops drivers off and finds its own parking garage space.
The U.S. automaker is betting a QNX product will be a big step up from Microsoft's problem-plagued in-vehicle communications system.
The iPhone 6 Plus is everywhere, even over international waters.
Takata is getting heat from lawmakers, lawyers and now Honda itself over its handling of the air bag recall crisis.
The electric car manufacturer's share price had fallen for eight consecutive days at Tuesday's opening.
Renault, Europe’s third-largest car company, hopes to grab market share in India with a slate of cars priced under $5,000.
Honda earlier added about 2.6 million cars in the United States when it expanded nationwide a recall of driver-side air bag inflators.
The nation's economic recovery has a lot less bounce than previous recoveries, at least from the carmakers' point of view.
China, the world's largest, fastest-growing car market, is cooling a lot. Here's why foreign automakers remain bullish on long-term growth.
The Ford Motor Co. is working on a hybrid version of America's iconic workhorse truck, the F-150 pickup. Will loyalists make the change?
Ford expands recall nationwide while Chrysler says it will replace passenger-side air bags in some regions. Confused?
Toyota said it would recall 185,000 vehicles across 19 models including the Corolla and Alphard in Japan, and 5,000 in China.
The U.S. auto industry is now 1.1 million new-vehicle sales away from recovering to pre-recession levels. And 2015 could be even better.
Takata has refused to accede to the NHTSA's demand even as automakers plan to initiate a joint inquiry into the company's air bags.
Black Friday deals pushed November car sales in the U.S. to highest level in more than a decade.
First it was an electrical short problem in the automatic windows switch; now it’s a problem with the headlamps.