Tesla's Driver-Monitoring System Defeated by Plastic Heads

Tesla's cabin camera system, designed to enforce attention through nag warnings and eventual speed throttling, cannot distinguish between human faces and cheap novelty figurines—a gap Chinese drivers have weaponized to bypass safety features without removing their hands from the wheel. This exposes the technical fragility of behavioral enforcement systems that rely on computer vision at scale. Tesla has no financial incentive to patch the vulnerability quickly since the company benefits from the safety narrative, while the actual failure pattern (a $5 plastic head beats a $50,000+ camera suite) directly contradicts the premium-tech positioning. The workaround reveals how compliance theater around driver attention can paradoxically create new safety risks when drivers learn they can disable the system entirely.