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China’s BYD Takes the Lead Over Tesla in the Self-Driving Car Wars

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As the auto industry races toward autonomy, most companies are rolling out driver-assist features with one hand while handing out waivers, disclaimers, and legal fine print with the other. Not BYD.

The Chinese EV giant just made an unprecedented move: it’s offering a public, financial guarantee for its autonomous parking system. If the system malfunctions, even due to an algorithmic failure, BYD will cover all resulting damages, including repair costs, third-party property damage, and compensation for personal injury.

“We are first in the world to propose a guarantee for autonomous parking,” the company said in a statement posted on social media Weibo. “Our move reflects absolute confidence in God’s Eye ADAS.”

It’s a bold promise that could set a new global benchmark for how automakers take—or avoid—responsibility for their autonomous technology.

While Tesla Warns, BYD Backs It Up

The announcement draws a sharp contrast with Tesla, whose Full Self-Driving (FSD) system is still marketed as a beta feature. Despite its name, FSD requires full driver supervision, and Tesla repeatedly reminds users that they, not the company, are legally responsible for anything that happens on the road.

BYD’s stance flips that logic on its head. It’s not just promising a smarter system; it’s promising corporate accountability, a component that has been largely missing from the discussion around consumer-grade autonomy.

This guarantee is being delivered via a simple over-the-air (OTA) software update, not as part of a flashy concept car. With the upcoming God’s Eye B update, BYD will enhance scene recognition, active safety, and precision parking in all conditions, including new functions like three-speed parking, U-turn assistance, and bypass maneuvers.

The First Real Liability Shift?

BYD wants to establish legal and financial trust. For years, regulators and safety advocates have warned that carmakers were deploying autonomous features too quickly without clearly defining who is to blame when something goes wrong. BYD’s pledge may be the first real-world test of shifting liability from the user back to the manufacturer.

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