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Microsoft and Stellantis want to use AI to help car owners

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Why This Matters

The partnership between Microsoft and Stellantis highlights the automotive industry's increasing reliance on AI and digital technologies to improve vehicle safety, cybersecurity, and user experience. This collaboration underscores the importance of secure, innovative connected car services as vehicles become more integrated with digital ecosystems, impacting both automakers and consumers.

Key Takeaways

Stellantis, the global car company that owns brands from Alfa Romeo to Vauxhall (including Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram), has begun a five-year partnership with Microsoft. The tech company will use its expertise to help the automaker improve its digital services, beef up its cybersecurity, and enhance its engineering capabilities. And yes, it will do that with the hype-iest of tech trends, AI.

When Ars Technica first started covering the auto industry, it was because technology had begun to infiltrate our vehicles. More than a decade later, the impact of that trend is impossible to ignore. Almost every new vehicle has at least one modem embedded somewhere, connected to some cloud or other. Active safety systems perceive other road users and intervene to prevent collisions. Touchscreens are ubiquitous—and a necessity for the smartphone-like services we’re told make Chinese cars so much better than anything we can buy here.

It’s difficult to say that all this innovation has been good, at least for the end user. Connected services can be very useful—ironically, one of the harder things to test with press cars—but only if those services are provided securely. Advanced driver assistance systems aren’t always that safe, as Tesla’s many federal investigations and recalls remind us. Touchscreens and capacitive panels might save automakers a few bucks, but they’re unquestionably worse in terms of human-machine interactions than real buttons or switches. And I don’t need to tell the Ars audience about the possible privacy implications of in-car apps.

Barring the currently unproven experiment that is the Slate Truck, it’s unlikely that we’ll see a significant change in the near future. Some regulators are requiring a return to buttons, but only for a few controls, and some automakers are going back to more traditional interfaces, but only to a degree. If the problem in the past has been core competencies and automakers trying to offer products outside of those, then partnering with a company like Microsoft may well result in some benefits.