The robo-taxi company Cruise – whose autonomous vehicles were banned last year from San Francisco streets – is no more.
Microsoft plans to take an $800 million charge after General Motors said it was shutting down its autonomous taxi initiative.
Partnerships, job cuts, restructuring in China and dumping Cruise's robotaxi fleet signal that GM is hyperfocused on cost ...
Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here ...
Forget fully autonomous robotaxis: the route to market for driverless technologies now looks like it could be incremental ...
Uber stock is swinging this week following news that General Motors is restructuring its Cruise unit. Here's what you need to ...
General Motors announced Tuesday it will no longer be funding its Cruise robotaxi operations after years of navigating ...
The Detroit auto giant says it’s halting its investment in Cruise’s robotaxi project at $4.4 billion, and integrating its ...
Microsoft expects an $800 million impairment charge as the result of GM's decision to end Cruise robotaxi operations, ...
The company suspended the Cruise self-driving taxi service late last year after a vehicle struck and seriously injured a ...
GM said it sees a better business case in developing autonomous technology for personal cars rather than to develop robotaxis ...
General Motors (GM) has announced a major shift in its autonomous vehicle strategy, discontinuing the development of ...