Zhang Yazhou was sitting in the passenger seat of her Tesla Model 3 when she said she heard her father’s panicked voice: The brakes don’t work! Approaching a red light, her father swerved around two cars before plowing into an SUV and a sedan and crashing into a large concrete barrier.

Stunned, Zhang gazed at the deflating airbag in front of her. She could never have imagined what was to come: Tesla sued her for defamation for complaining publicly about the car’s brakes — and won. A Chinese court ordered Zhang to pay more than $23,000 in damages and publicly apologize to the $1.1 trillion company.

  • @cm0002
    link
    English
    1511 hours ago

    What? A country with heavy censorship and restrictions on speech would not protect their citizens from a massive company when they write a bad review‽

    Well I am shocked, SHOCKED I say

    • @PugJesus
      link
      English
      1410 hours ago

      But I was told China was the only country which was keeping those damn capitalists in line???

      • NoneOfUrBusiness
        link
        fedilink
        -310 hours ago

        I mean tbf this is out of character for China. I guess Elon gave out generous bribes.

          • NoneOfUrBusiness
            link
            fedilink
            -19 hours ago

            I mean okay and? What I’m trying to is that China is usually on the government dictatorship side of the spectrum so it’s weird that they’re suppressing free speech about a private—and foreign—government with no ties to Beijing.

            • @PugJesus
              link
              English
              7
              edit-2
              9 hours ago

              I mean okay and? What I’m trying to is that China is usually on the government dictatorship side of the spectrum so it’s weird that they’re suppressing free speech about a private—and foreign—government with no ties to Beijing.

              Tesla does massive amounts of business in China, what are you talking about? Their latest Chinese factory cost literal billions of dollars.

              Why would a government more on the ‘dictatorship side of the spectrum’ have any problem with suppressing free speech about their wealthy investors?

              • NoneOfUrBusiness
                link
                fedilink
                -28 hours ago

                No reason in hindsight, but it’s still out or character. At least to my knowledge they don’t typically do this sort of thing.