They Have to be Told: Stop Wearing Vision Pro Goggles While Driving Your Tesla, U.S. Says Videos, many of them stunts or jokes, of people wearing Apple’s new virtual reality headset while driving Teslas in Autopilot mode prompted officials to issue warnings.
Stop Wearing Vision Pro Goggles While Driving Your Tesla, U.S. Says
Videos,
many of them stunts or jokes, of people wearing Apple’s new virtual
reality headset while driving Teslas in Autopilot mode prompted
officials to issue warnings.
Across
social media, videos and images have circulated of people wearing the
headsets while dining at restaurants, working out at the gym and simply
walking across the street.Credit...Etienne Laurent/EPA, via Shutterstock
Videos
being shared across social media this week depict an almost dystopian,
futuristic scene: drivers of Teslas in Autopilot mode while wearing
Apple Vision Pro headsets, seemingly unaware of the road in front of
them.
The videos led federal transportation officials to issue warnings.
But are people really mindlessly riding around in Teslas in Autopilot mode, wearing Apple’s futuristic new goggles? Or is it all just a bit? Part of a never-ending cycle of people doing silly things for clicks, likes, views and clout?
The
new goggles have a feature that merges digital apps and one’s
surroundings into one immersive space, and videos of people wearing them
in strange settings have started to crop up across the internet since
they were released on Feb. 2.
Several
of the videos taken in cars appear staged, and in many, it is clear that
someone other than the driver is recording. The videos are not
widespread. Still, they seemed reckless enough for Pete Buttigieg, the
transportation secretary, to weigh in on social media.
“Reminder
— ALL advanced driver assistance systems available today require the
human driver to be in control and fully engaged in the driving task at
all times,” Mr. Buttigieg said in a post on X that included a video of a driver using a headset in what appeared to be a Tesla Cybertruck pickup.
The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration also chimed in on
Tuesday. The agency said in a statement that “driving while wearing a
V.R. headset is reckless and disregards the safety of everyone on the
road.”
In the video, Mr. Lentini appears to be typing while wearing the headset as introspective piano music plays in the background.
“Think different,” Mr. Lentini wrote on X, in an apparent nod to a famous Apple advertising campaign
from the late 1990s. His video has been viewed more than 24 million
times. (One commenter wrote, “I genuinely hope you get arrested for
this.”)
Later in the video, Mr.
Lentini appears to have been pulled over in a parking lot, and there are
police vehicles in the background with their lights on. The way the
video is edited, it suggests that Mr. Lentini was pulled over for
driving while wearing the headset.
But
Mr. Lentini said in the interview that the police were responding to
something else in the area at the time, and that he and someone else
recorded them in the “right time, right moment.”
He
also said that, despite how it appears in the video, he did not have
any apps turned on in the headset and he wore it for only about 30
seconds.
“That was just for the video,” he said.
Across
social media, videos and images have circulated not just of people
driving while wearing the Vision Pro headset, but also while dining at restaurants and working out at the gym.
Is
this the future? A world in which people can’t step away from the
digital realm long enough to focus solely on everyday tasks such as
socializing or exercising?
Eric Decker, a YouTube and TikTok creator who goes by the name Airrack, posted a video
poking fun at an “average day for an Apple Vision Pro owner,” showing
him wearing the headset while lifting weights at the gym, getting his
hair cut, going through airport security, walking down a street and even
showering. (The Vision Pro is not waterproof.)
“I truly feel most of these videos are skits,” Mr. Lentini said. “You can just tell.”
Still,
skit or not, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on
Tuesday that distracted driving is no joke. In 2021, more than 3,500
people in the United States were killed in crashes involving distracted
driving, and more than 360,000 were injured, the agency said.
“There are no fully autonomous vehicles available for sale today,” the agency said.
“Never
use the device while operating a moving vehicle, bicycle, heavy
machinery, or in any other situations requiring attention to safety,”
the company says.
Mr.
Lentini said that the Vision Pro headset has a driving mode feature
intended for passengers that disables the use of many apps.
Apple
has billed Vision Pro as a “spatial computing” device that allows users
to watch videos, send emails and surf the internet in a immersive
virtual reality. The headsets start at $3,499.
Jesus Jiménez covers breaking news, online trends and other subjects. He is based in New York City.More about Jesus Jiménez
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