TONIGHT (May 17), I'm at the INTERNET ARCHIVE in SAN FRANCISCO to keynote the 10th anniversary of the AUTHORS ALLIANCE.
As a science fiction writer, I find it weird that some sf tropes – like space colonization – have become culture-war touchstones. You know, that whole "we were promised jetpacks" thing.
I confess, I never looked too hard at the practicalities of jetpacks, because they are so obviously either used as a visual shorthand (as in the Jetsons) or as a metaphor. Even a brief moment's serious consideration should make it clear why we wouldn't want the distracted, stoned, drunk, suicidal, homicidal maniacs who pilot their two-ton killbots through our residential streets at 75mph to be flying over our heads with a reservoir of high explosives strapped to their backs.
Jetpacks can make for interesting sf eyeball kicks or literary symbols, but I don't actually want to live in a world of jetpacks. I just want to read about them, and, of course, write about them:
https://reactormag.com/chicken-little/
I had blithely assumed that this was the principle reason we never got the jetpacks we were "promised." I mean, there kind of was a promise, right? I grew up seeing videos of rocketeers flying their jetpacks high above the heads of amazed crowds, at World's Fairs and Disneyland and big public spectacles. There was that scene in Thunderball where James Bond (the canonical Connery Bond, no less) makes an escape by jetpack. There was even a Gilligan's Island episode where the castaways find a jetpack and scheme to fly it all the way back to Hawai'i:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0588084/
Clearly, jetpacks were possible, but they didn't make any sense, so we decided not to use them, right?
Well, I was wrong. In a terrific new 99 Percent Invisible episode, Chris Berube tracks the history of all those jetpacks we saw on TV for decades, and reveals that they were all the same jetpack, flown by just one guy, who risked his life every time he went up in it:
The jetpack in question – technically a "rocket belt" – was built in the 1960s by Wendell Moore at the Bell Aircraft Corporation, with funding from the DoD. The Bell rocket belt used concentrated hydrogen peroxide as fuel, which burned at temperatures in excess of 1,000'. The rocket belt had a maximum flight time of just 21 seconds.
It was these limitations that disqualified the rocket belt from being used by anyone except stunt pilots with extremely high tolerances for danger. Any tactical advantage conferred on infantrymen by the power to soar over a battlefield for a whopping 21 seconds was totally obliterated by the fact that this infantryman would be encumbered by an extremely heavy, unwieldy and extremely explosive backpack, to say nothing of the high likelihood that rocketeers would plummet out of the sky after failing to track the split-second capacity of a jetpack.
And of course, the rocket belt wasn't going to be a civilian commuting option. If your commute can be accomplished in just 21 seconds of flight time, you should probably just walk, rather than strapping an inferno to your back and risking a lethal fall if you exceed a margin of error measured in just seconds.
Once you know about the jetpack's technical limitations, it's obvious why we never got jetpacks. So why did we expect them? Because we were promised them, and the promise was a lie.
Moore was a consummate showman, which is to say, a bullshitter. He was forever telling the press that his jetpacks would be on everyone's back in one to two years, and he got an impressionable young man, Bill Suitor, to stage showy public demonstrations of the rocket belt. If you ever saw a video of a brave rocketeer piloting a jetpack, it was almost certainly Suitor. Suitor was Connery's stunt-double in Thunderball, and it was he who flew the rocket belt around Sleeping Beauty castle.
Suitor's interview with Berube for the podcast is delightful. Suitor is a hilarious, profane old airman who led an extraordinary life and tells stories with expert timing, busting out great phrases like "a surprise is a fart with a lump in it."
But what's most striking about the tale of the Bell rocket belt is the shape of the deception that Moore and Bell pulled off. By conspicuously failing to mention the rocket belt's limitations, and by callously risking Suitor's life over and over again, they were able to create the impression that jetpacks were everywhere, and that they were trembling on the verge of widespread, popular adoption.
What's more, they played a double game: all the public enthusiasm they manufactured with their carefully stage-managed, canned demos was designed to help them win more defense contracts to keep their dream alive. Ultimately, Uncle Sucker declined to continue funding their boondoggle, and the demos petered out, and the "promise" of a jetpack was broken.
As I listened to the 99 Percent Invisible episode, I was struck by the familiarity of this shuck: this is exactly what the self-driving car bros did over the past decade to convince us all that the human driver was already obsolete. The playbook was nearly identical, right down to the shameless huckster insisting that "full self-driving is one to two years away" every year for a decade:
The Potemkin rocket belt was a calculated misdirection, as are the "full self-driving" demos that turn out to be routine, pre-programmed runs on carefully manicured closed tracks:
Practical rocketeering wasn't ever "just around the corner," because a flying, 21 second blast-furnace couldn't be refined into a practical transport. Making the tank bigger would not make this thing safer or easier to transport.
The jetpack showman hoped to cash out by tricking Uncle Sucker into handing him a fat military contract. Robo-car scammers used their conjurer's tricks to cash out to the public markets, taking Uber public on the promise of robo-taxis, even as Uber's self-driving program burned through $2.5b and produced a car with a half-mile mean time between fatal collisions, which the company had to pay someone else $400m to take the business off their hands:
It's not just self-driving cars. Time and again, the incredibly impressive AI demos that the press credulously promotes turn out to be scams. The dancing robot on stage at the splashy event is literally a guy in a robot-suit:
The centuries' worth of progress the AI made in discovering new materials actually "discovered" a bunch of trivial variations on existing materials, as well as a huge swathe of materials that only exist at absolute zero:
The AI grocery store where you just pick things up and put them in your shopping basket without using the checkout turns out to be a call-center full of low-waged Indian workers desperately squinting at videos of you, trying to figure out what you put in your bag:
The discovery of these frauds somehow never precipitates disillusionment. Rather than getting angry with marketers for tricking them, reporters are ventriloquized into repeating the marketing claim that these aren't lies, they're premature truths. Sure, today these are faked, but once the product is refined, the fakery will no longer be required.
This must be the kinds of Magic Underpants Gnomery the credulous press engaged in during the jetpack days: "Sure, a 21-second rocket belt is totally useless for anything except wowing county fair yokels – but once they figure out how to fit an order of magnitude more high-explosive onto that guy's back, this thing will really take off!"
The AI version of this is that if we just keep throwing orders of magnitude more training data and compute at the stochastic parrot, it will eventually come to life and become our superintelligent, omnipotent techno-genie. In other words, if we just keep breeding these horses to run faster and faster, eventually one of our prize mares will give birth to a locomotive:
As a society, we have vested an alarming amount of power in the hands of tech billionaires who profess to be embittered science fiction fans who merely want to realize the "promises" of our Golden Age stfnal dreams. These bros insist that they can overcome both the technical hurdles and the absolutely insurmountable privation involved in space colonization:
As Charlie Stross writes, it's not just that these weirdos can't tell the difference between imaginative parables about the future and predictions about the future – it's also that they keep mistaking dystopias for business plans:
Cyberpunk was a warning, not a suggestion. Please, I beg you, stop building the fucking torment nexus:
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/torment-nexus
These techno-billionaires profess to be fulfilling a broken promise, but surely they know that the promises were made by liars – showmen using parlor tricks to sell the impossible. You were "promised a jetpack" in the same sense that table-rapping "spiritualists" promised you a conduit to talk with the dead, or that carny barkers promised you a girl that could turn into a gorilla:
That's quite a supervillain origin story: "I was promised a jetpack, but then I grew up discovered that it was just a special effect. In revenge, I am promising you superintelligent AIs and self-driving cars, and these, too, are SFX."
In other words: "Die a disillusioned jetpack fan or live long enough to become the fraudster who cooked up the jetpack lie you despise."
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
U.S. Launches Investigation into 2.4 Million Tesla Vehicles After Accidents
The U.S. government is checking out Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) software more closely. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has kicked off an investigation into 2.4 million Teslas after four accidents were reported. One of those crashes was deadly, and that’s got people really worried about how safe the tech actually is.
What Prompted the Investigation?
The NHTSA is…
Un accident mortel impliquant une Tesla en mode semi-autonome fait l'objet d'une enquête fédérale aux États-Unis
Une enquête approfondie de la NHTSA
Le 19 juin dernier, un grave accident s’est produit au Texas lorsqu’une Tesla Model 3 a percuté une maison après avoir quitté la route. Une femme de 76 ans, qui se trouvait à l’intérieur du domicile, a été grièvement blessée et est décédée des suites de ses blessures. Le conducteur, indemne, a affirmé aux enquêteurs que le véhicule était en mode de conduite…
Tesla’s European Self-Driving Push Could Redefine the Future of Mobility
Europe’s automotive industry is quietly entering a new era — one where software may become more important than horsepower, battery range, or even vehicle design.
For years, the electric vehicle race dominated headlines across Europe. Automakers competed aggressively on battery technology, charging infrastructure, and EV production capacity. But the next major battlefield is no longer just electrification. It is autonomous driving.
At the center of that transition is Tesla.
The company’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, long surrounded by controversy, regulatory scrutiny, and bold promises, is now slowly making its way into Europe. After years of delays and restrictions, Tesla has begun expanding its “FSD Supervised” system through regulatory approvals in the Netherlands and pilot deployments across select European markets.
While still limited in scope, the move represents something much larger than a software rollout. It signals the beginning of a broader shift in how Europe may approach autonomous driving technology in the years ahead.
Europe Is Becoming the Next Autonomous Driving Battleground
The global automotive industry is rapidly evolving into a software-driven business.
Modern vehicles are no longer defined only by engines or manufacturing quality. Increasingly, they are becoming rolling computing platforms powered by artificial intelligence, advanced sensors, machine learning systems, and real-time navigation software.
Automakers understand this transformation clearly.
Over the past several years, companies including Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Volkswagen Group, BYD, and XPeng have significantly expanded investments into autonomous driving systems and AI-powered vehicle software. The competition is no longer limited to who builds the best electric vehicle — it is now about who controls the smartest vehicle operating system.
Industry analysts believe the autonomous vehicle software market could surpass $100 billion globally within the next decade as advanced driver-assistance systems become mainstream across passenger vehicles, logistics fleets, and future robotaxi networks.
Europe, however, has traditionally taken a far more cautious approach compared to the United States.
Why Tesla Faced Regulatory Resistance in Europe
Unlike the U.S. market, where Tesla released beta versions of Full Self-Driving years ago, European regulators maintained tighter oversight under the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) framework.
The region’s regulatory model has historically prioritized safety validation before large-scale deployment of semi-autonomous systems on public roads. That approach slowed the rollout of features involving hands-free steering, automated lane changes, and AI-assisted navigation.
Tesla’s aggressive branding around “Full Self-Driving” also created skepticism among European regulators and safety groups, many of whom argued that the technology still required active human supervision.
But the regulatory environment has started to evolve.
During 2025 and 2026, European authorities began exploring frameworks for what the industry increasingly calls “Level 2++” autonomous systems — technologies capable of handling steering, acceleration, braking, and lane navigation while still requiring driver oversight.
That regulatory shift opened the door for Tesla’s gradual expansion.
Tesla’s European Expansion Is About More Than Features
Tesla’s latest deployments are not simply software updates for existing customers.
They represent a strategic attempt to establish Tesla as a leading software platform inside Europe’s future mobility ecosystem.
The company has already faced increasing pressure in Europe’s EV market. Chinese automakers such as BYD and XPeng are aggressively expanding across the region with competitively priced electric vehicles, while traditional European automakers continue accelerating their own EV strategies.
As competition intensifies, Tesla is looking beyond vehicle sales alone.
Software services such as Full Self-Driving could become one of the company’s most important long-term revenue streams. Unlike traditional hardware sales, automotive software subscriptions generate recurring income and significantly higher profit margins.
That business model could become critical as EV pricing pressure increases globally.
Tesla’s broader vision goes even further.
The company sees autonomous driving software as the foundation for future robotaxi networks, AI-powered transportation systems, logistics automation, and connected mobility services. Successfully expanding FSD into Europe could strengthen Tesla’s long-term position in all of those markets.
The Real Challenge Is Trust, Not Technology
Despite the excitement around autonomous driving, the biggest obstacle remains public and regulatory trust.
Advanced driver-assistance systems still face concerns involving road safety, driver behavior, legal liability, and accident accountability. Regulators remain cautious about how quickly autonomous technologies should be allowed onto public roads.
Tesla’s European rollout is therefore being viewed as a major test case.
If the company can demonstrate strong safety performance under Europe’s stricter regulatory environment, it could accelerate approvals for broader autonomous driving deployments across the European Union.
At the same time, failures or high-profile incidents could trigger tighter restrictions and slow industry adoption.
The stakes are enormous because autonomous driving could eventually reshape multiple sectors far beyond personal transportation.
Industries expected to be heavily influenced include:
Logistics and delivery services
Insurance
Ride-hailing platforms
Urban transportation planning
Fleet management
Smart city infrastructure
Autonomous systems are increasingly viewed not just as automotive technology, but as a foundational layer of future digital economies.
Europe’s Automotive Industry Is Entering a Software Era
Tesla’s gradual FSD expansion reflects a much larger transformation happening across the global automotive sector.
Cars are evolving into AI-powered platforms where software updates, machine learning models, and connected services may ultimately define competitive advantage more than traditional engineering alone.
That transition is forcing automakers to rethink their entire business models.
The companies that dominate the next generation of mobility may not simply be the ones that manufacture the best vehicles — they may be the ones that build the most intelligent software ecosystems.
Tesla’s push into Europe shows that battle has already begun.
And for Europe’s automotive industry, the age of software-defined mobility is no longer a future concept. It is arriving now.
Tesla dévoile un nouveau Full Self-Driving en pleine tempête judiciaire : innovation ou diversion stratégique ?
Alors que Tesla est actuellement sous le feu des critiques judiciaires et réglementaires pour sa communication jugée trompeuse sur ses capacités de conduite autonome, le constructeur automobile d’Elon Musk a levé le voile sur une nouvelle version de son logiciel controversé : le Full Self-Driving (FSD). Cette mise à jour technologique, ambitieuse sur le plan de l’intelligence artificielle,…
Tesla entre dans l’ère du robotaxi : lancement officiel dans la Bay Area
Tesla a officiellement lancé son service de robotaxi dans la région de la Baie de San Francisco (Bay Area), marquant une étape majeure dans la concrétisation de sa vision pour la mobilité autonome. Ce service, initialement limité à une flotte avec des conducteurs de sécurité à bord, est une phase de déploiement contrôlé avant un fonctionnement totalement autonome.
Comment fonctionne le robotaxi…
Tesla just lost a $329M Autopilot lawsuit.
So the board gave Elon Musk a $23B bonus.
Executives are leaving. Cars are crashing.
Sales are falling. RoboTaxis are banned.
But sure — let’s reward the guy who hasn’t shown up in years.
#Tesla #TSLAQ #Musk
Tesla realiza primeira entrega de carro com direção autônoma do início ao fim
A Tesla realizou um feito inédito: a entrega de um carro conduzido inteiramente por um sistema autônomo, do início ao fim da jornada. O veículo, um Model Y, partiu da Gigafactory em Austin, no Texas, e foi até a casa do cliente sem qualquer intervenção humana.
A rota percorreu vias expressas, regiões suburbanas e áreas residenciais, completando todo o trajeto de forma autônoma. A Tesla…