Tesla highlights FSD 14.3.3 videos
- Tesla-focused YouTube creators published new videos on May 19 and May 20 highlighting Tesla's FSD 14.3.3 update and arguing it improved driving safety. - Ryan Shaw cited a live intervention counter and 33% faster Actually Smart Summon, while Ananto said FSD 14.3.3 “saved” him and his wife twice. - Tesla lists FSD v14 as a current supervised trial on its support pages, while creators continue posting road-test videos.
Tesla-focused YouTube creators spent May 19 and May 20 promoting Tesla’s Full Self-Driving 14.3.3 software as a meaningful update for drivers, with videos centered on new features, robotaxi crash debates and anecdotal safety claims. Ryan Shaw’s “Tesla’s HUGE New Update Is Here | All New Features” was posted on May 20 and said FSD v14.3.3 had shipped with a live intervention counter and a 33% faster Actually Smart Summon. Ananto’s “Tesla FSD 14.3.3 Just SAVED My Life… Twice!” was also posted on May 20 and framed the update through a supervised drive in Long Island, New York. The video description said the creator tested narrow roads, dead ends, sun glare, birds and potholes, and would show “what Tesla improved — and what still needs work.” A third video, “Tesla Robotaxi Crash Reports Just Backfired on Every Tesla Critic,” was crawled on May 20 and presented the robotaxi crash-report debate from a pro-Tesla angle. (youtube.com) The cluster of videos shows how creator coverage around Tesla’s latest software release is being tied directly to safety claims and robotaxi credibility. ### Which videos drove the conversation around FSD 14.3.3? (youtube.com) Ryan Shaw’s May 20 video had 5,279 views about an hour after posting, according to YouTube’s visible page data at crawl time. The description bundled several Tesla topics together, including a U.S. Model Y price increase, FSD v14.3.3 features and newly unredacted robotaxi crash reports submitted to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (youtube.com) FutureAzA’s “Tesla Robotaxi Crash Reports Just Backfired on Every Tesla Critic” had 2,844 views about four hours after posting when crawled on May 20. The title itself made the argument that newly public crash-report material favored Tesla’s case rather than its critics’. Ananto’s May 20 video had 649 views about two hours after posting when crawled. Its description said the drive would test FSD 14.3.3 in “terrifying real-world moments” and present the creator’s “honest thoughts.” (youtube.com) ### What can actually be verified about the update itself? Tesla’s support page says Full Self-Driving (Supervised) v14 is currently being offered in a trial and describes the system as requiring active driver supervision and not making the vehicle autonomous. (youtube.com) Tesla lists features including route navigation, lane changes, parking and Actually Smart Summon. Not a Tesla App’s release-notes page for software version 2026.14.6.6 says FSD 14.3.3 adds an 8 mph cap for Actually Smart Summon, up from 6 mph, and lets drivers see distance traveled in FSD without an intervention as well as their longest intervention-free streak. (youtube.com) Electrek separately reported the same speed increase on May 17. ### Why were creators tying the update to robotaxi crash reports? (tesla.com) Ryan Shaw’s video description said Tesla had “unredacts 17 Robotaxi crash reports to NHTSA,” linking the software discussion to the company’s broader autonomous-driving narrative. FutureAzA’s video title made the same connection more directly by arguing the crash reports had “backfired” on critics. Reuters reported in a recent YouTube posting that Tesla robotaxis were facing a probe over alleged traffic violations after U.S. regulators reviewed online videos. (notateslaapp.com) That regulatory backdrop helps explain why creators are emphasizing version-specific improvements and intervention-free metrics when discussing FSD 14.3.3. That connection is an inference from the timing and framing of the videos, not a stated position from Tesla in the materials reviewed here. (youtube.com) ### How much weight do the “saved my life” claims carry? Ananto’s “saved my life” claim is anecdotal and comes from the creator’s own description of a supervised drive, not from Tesla safety data or a regulator’s finding. The same description also says the video covers what still needs work, underscoring that the upload is a personal road test rather than a formal safety assessment. (youtube.com) Tesla’s own FSD page says current features require active driver supervision and do not make the vehicle autonomous. That means the strongest verified facts in this round of coverage are the release-note items and the existence of the creator videos themselves, not the broader safety conclusions being argued in the videos. ### Where does this go next? Tesla’s support page says the FSD v14 trial is available to new and existing owners of several vehicle models, including Model 3, Model Y, Model S, Model X and Cybertruck. (youtube.com) As more owners receive software version 2026.14.6.6, the next concrete evidence is likely to come from additional release-note confirmations, owner road tests and any further NHTSA disclosures tied to Tesla’s robotaxi and supervised FSD programs. (tesla.com 1) (tesla.com 2)