this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2025
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That's 2x. Seems too obvious to be happening on all teslas
Open up your Google Maps (or navigation app of choice) and you'll likely have a record of how far you've traveled within a given time period.
Subtract off any cab rides and rides in friends' cars, and that's your number plus or minus some distance in driveways or parking garages that the app can't accurately measure.
Sure. But then you're still relying on an accurate odometer. I assumed the question was how you do it when disputing one.
In the case of the article, the plaintiff is using prior vehicle mileage rates as countervailing evidence.
The plaintiff is using that as one piece evidence right now at the start of the case. Of course they can and will gather and present other evidence.
Obviously UK consumer protection is different so they may not have the "feature" here, but cars get their milage recorded yearly (after the first 3 years) as part of roadworthiness testing, available online given the licence plate, so I can see I did 7041 miles in the last year.
Does the DMV not have something similar?
If you don't have an especially long commute, good chance you're between 12k to 15k per year. That's a typical yearly amount, and leases are usually set around there.
13k in six months is about twice the average.
Maybe multiplying each driven distance by the number of owners? I wouldn't put it beyond them if they code that crap with AI.
I definitely lean toward this being genuine manufacturing error (or user error).
That said? Never underestimate the power of market research. I was just chatting with a friend about how neither of us understand cars beyond the most basic of emergency maintenance and I could 100% see a predatory system target us (moreso than the ones we know target us).
Similarly, I would assume most former grad students are used to actually monitoring mileage because we are trying to push our crap for as long as we can. Whereas someone who has been a tech bro for a decade probably expects to buy a new car every time they get a bonus and wouldn't care.
That said? Assuming this IS fraud on tesla's part (and that is generally a safe assumption), my money is on something like:
The odometer nudging is designed to make sure everyone hits their mileage based warranty after N years. Every M months it will estimate your average use and "nudge" you based on heuristics. Hinton had a particularly low mileage the period before so it scaled them much higher for the next period while they were monitoring it.