Automakers pitch semi-automated driver assistance features as the future of automotive safety, but a recent study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety suggests otherwise. It found that drivers are much more likely to engage with distractions while using the systems, such as checking thei...
Read Also
- Time To Buy? New Vehicle Inventories And Incentives Are Up
- This Plug-In-Hybrid RV Will Offer 500 Miles of Anxiety-Free Range
- Buick OMPV Concept Previews Future Luxury Vans For China
- Buick OMPV Concept Previews The Future Of Luxury Minivans In China
- 2024 Lexus GX550 Malbon Edition Will Match Your Silly Golf Pants
- 2024 Lexus GX550 Malbon Edition Will Match Your Silly Golf Pants
- Ford’s Latest Patent Will Protect Drivers From Accidentally Becoming Drug Traffickers
- Ford’s Latest Patent Will Protect Drivers From Accidentally Becoming Drug Traffickers
- U.S. Automakers May Have to Stop Selling Chinese-Built Vehicles Here
- Biden Administration Moves To Ban Chinese And Russian Connected Car Tech
Latest The Truth About Cars
- Time To Buy? New Vehicle Inventories And Incentives Are Up
- U.S. Automakers May Have to Stop Selling Chinese-Built Vehicles Here
- Used Car of the Day: 2006 Ford Ranger EV Conversion
- IIHS: Drivers More Likely To Engage With Distractions While Using Hands-Free Driving Technologies
- GM Gears Up for Layoffs As Facility Shifts from Malibu to Bolt EV Production
- GM Gears Up for Layoffs As Facility Shifts from Malibu to Bolt EV Production
- Junkyard Find: 2003 Hyundai Elantra GT 5-door Hatchback
- QOTD: What Brand Makes the Best Used Cars?
- Used Car of the Day: 2006 Pontiac GTO
- Used Car of the Day: 2006 Pontiac GTO