Hang about 1 pound of weight on one side of the steering wheel. Autopilot is fooled when "you" keep trying to tug it out of the lane. A larger input on the steering wheel will surrender the car to your control.
Wow, I'm amazed at the lengths people will go.
I find it odd that I don't hear about crashes from other auto makers that have features similar to Tesla's autopilot. I can see three possibilities:
1. Tesla's marketing strategy makes it a bigger magnet for publicity.
2. Tesla's feature works differently than others in a manner that instills over-confidence.
3. Tesla somehow attracts a "special" class of drivers.
In regards to Option 2, I read a review once that compared Mercedes' Drive Pilot with Tesla's Autopilot. The reviewer stated that the Tesla drove arrow straight down the center of the lane, but the Mercedes wandered a bit within the lane. The reviewer claimed that this was by design to prevent the driver from thinking he has a self-driving car.
I will say that Tesla generally seems to be more risk-tolerant. I signed up for a Tesla test drive before the Model 3 was available. They were perfectly happy to let me drive a $120,000 S model, even though I told them up front that I had no intention of buying it. I just wanted to see the general feel to get a hint as to whether I was willing to wait for a Model 3.
Mercedes had a blanket rule that customers are not allowed to test drive any vehicle with Drive Pilot. So I did two test drives with them. I drove a model without Drive Pilot, and I watched the salesman drive a model with it.
Is called "Summons". You still have to drive it albeit with your phone, but if you choose to do so then you are choosing to do so. The cars so equipped have about 12 cameras and I-don't-know what else. Thing that scares me is how it can park within 2" of the wall of your garage.
I personally wouldn't call it "driving" from outside the car, using your cell phone. At a bare minimum, I think it's rude for owners to test this beta functionality in a public parking lot. IMO, they should test this novelty functionality on their own property or on a closed course of some sort.