Tesla's Autopilot Lawsuit Ends With a Ho-Hum SettlementIt won't chase after a former director who allegedly took sensitive info.

ByJon Fingas

This story originally appeared onEngadget

Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg/Getty Images via engadget

Tesla's lawsuit over thealleged theft of Autopilot trade secretsis coming to a quick end. The electric car makerhas settledits lawsuit against Sterling Anderson, who was accused of violating his contract by making off with Tesla technology and forming a competing self-driving startup, Aurora Innovation, with the help of both former Tesla engineers and Google'sChris Urmson. The deal has Tesla withdraw its claims without asking for damages, court costs or any findings of guilt. In return, though, Anderson and Aurora are not only paying $100,000, but will face some very close scrutiny.

The terms of Anderson's contract will "remain in place" and also cover Aurora, Tesla says. Also, it'll establish a process that lets Tesla not only reclaim its Autopilot data, but conduct "ongoing audits" of Aurora's computers to make sure the company isn't holding on to the info behind Tesla's back.

When Tesla filed the suit in January, Aurora called it a "meritless" case that highlighted an "unhealthy fear of competition." However, the quick settlement isn't exactly supporting that position -- you'd expect Aurora to fight back if it was David to Tesla's Goliath. Whatever the truth, Aurora will have to walk a fine line while developing its autonomous tech.

Wavy Line
Jon Fingas is an associate editor at Engadget.

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