How car safety became a major selling point
In the past, car safety was an afterthought, but it is now top of mind for many automakers. Many companies now advertise safety ratings from groups like the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. But the road to safer cars over the years has had many stops and starts, with opposition from both inside and outside the industry. Today, increasingly modern systems raise a new set of safety questions as automakers seek to reduce traffic deaths.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Crypto fund defaults on $670M loan, and Bitfury CEO says prices aren't 'relevant': CNBC Crypto World
-
Clean startup, DroneSeed, begins investing in reforestation by generating carbon credits
-
What are NFTs?
-
Airbnb shutters its China biz
-
Booking Holdings, Airbnb and Expedia fall more than 15% month-to-date as flight cancellations show ripple effects
-
Must support Ukraine as long as it takes, urges NATO secretary-general
-
NATO chief: Would not be good for the military if we're the only fossil fuel sector left
-
Why companies like Stripe, Meta and Alphabet are bankrolling carbon removal startups
-
Competitors watching Kellogg's split to see if it works, says Piper Sandler's Michael Lavery
-
U.S. recession is not my base case, says New York Fed President John Williams
-
Here's how much you should have in retirement at every age
-
Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood says U.S. is already in a recession
-
What happened with Three Arrows Capital?
-
De Nora CEO: 'We're not scared' of market turbulence ahead of IPO this week
-
More aggressive Fed could lead ECB hawks to push for more hikes, strategist says
-
'Very high chance' the Fed will cut rates in 2023, UniCredit global chief says