in-house chips AI News & Updates
Tesla Discontinues Dojo AI Supercomputer Project, Shifts to External Partners
Tesla is shutting down its Dojo AI training supercomputer project and disbanding the team, with lead engineer Peter Bannon leaving the company. The company is pivoting to rely more heavily on external partners like Nvidia and AMD for compute power, while signing a $16.5 billion deal with Samsung for AI6 inference chips. This represents a major strategic shift away from in-house chip development that CEO Elon Musk had previously touted as crucial for achieving full self-driving capabilities.
Skynet Chance (-0.03%): Tesla's shift away from developing proprietary AI hardware reduces potential concentration of advanced AI capabilities under a single company's control. Increased reliance on established vendors like Nvidia creates more distributed oversight and standardization in AI development infrastructure.
Skynet Date (+1 days): The abandonment of Dojo represents a setback in Tesla's AI ambitions and suggests slower progress toward autonomous systems that could pose control risks. This strategic retreat likely delays aggressive AI capability development in the automotive sector.
AGI Progress (-0.04%): Tesla's retreat from custom AI hardware development represents a step back from vertical integration in AI systems. The failure of Dojo, which was designed to process vast amounts of video data for autonomous driving, suggests challenges in scaling specialized AI compute infrastructure.
AGI Date (+0 days): While Tesla's pivot to external partners may provide access to more mature hardware, the abandonment of Dojo likely delays Tesla's specific contributions to AGI through autonomous vehicle AI. However, increased reliance on Nvidia may accelerate overall progress through established infrastructure.