Tesla’s Robotaxis keep screwing up. There’s now a list of incidents.

The Robotaxi service in Tesla, launched in Austin, Texas, less than a week ago, saw its vehicles involved in so many doubtful situations that Redditors has drawn up a list of all incidents.
The list (via the rod) is currently made up of 11 videos of Tesla Robotaxie making fairly obvious mistakes such as driving on the wrong track, running on borders and stop in the middle of the road for no valid reason.
This is not an excellent look for the service that works less than a week, with only 10 to 20 Tesla Model Y cars, and only in a zone limited to South Austin.
Mashable lighting speed
Videos show that Tesla Robotaxis seems to violate traffic laws in Austin
The list was mainly established by people who drive in Tesla Robotaxi cars, and it continues to increase. Certain incidents can be explained by legitimate causes, such as a video of Robotaxi Tesla braking unexpectedly, which could have been caused by sudden sunlight (although this again raises the question of the validity of Tesla’s vision only to self-contained driving, as opposed to the use of additional sensors such as lidars). Some, like another video from a Tesla seeming to run on a sidewalk, seem to be simple Robotaxi errors.
It should be noted that many Robotaxi users have described their experience as fluid and comfortable. The service is currently open to the “Early Access” group, which consists mainly of enthusiasts and influencers from Tesla. In addition, although some of the above videos are disturbing, Tesla’s robotaxis does not seem to have been involved in accidents so far.
The CEO of Tesla, Elon Musk, hopes to extend the Robotaxi service in the coming months, with “millions” of cars that should be operational next year, and the goal of people who can send their teslas to work like Robotaxis. However, we do not know why the service would see such rapid progress, since Musk has promised radical improvements to the complete Tesla autonomous technology (the assistance suite which allows partially autonomous driving), which continues to be postponed.