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Tesla just took a major shot at Uber's purchase of Otto

Jan 28, 2017, 20:37 IST

Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk talks at the Automotive World News Congress at the Renaissance Center in Detroit, Michigan, January 13, 2015.REUTERS/Rebecca Cook

Tesla threw some shade at Uber in a lawsuit it filed Thursday.

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The lawsuit itself actually has nothing to do with Uber. In the suit, Tesla accused its former Autopilot director Sterling Anderson of taking company data to use for a competing self-driving-car company, Aurora Innovation. The lawsuit also names Chris Urmson, the former tech lead of Google's self-driving-car unit, as a defendant, calling him Sterling's business partner at Aurora.

But while detailing Anderson's motive for starting the company, Tesla took a shot at both Uber and General Motors. After establishing Tesla Autopilot as a leader in the self-driving-car space, the lawsuit reads:

Tesla's lawsuit alleges that Anderson and Urmson started the company knowing their credentials might make it an attractive candidate for an acquisition by a major company - even if their product doesn't warrant it.

Uber and GM both declined to comment for this story.

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Anthony Levandowski, a co-founder of Google's self-driving-car unit, left the tech giant to start Otto, a self-driving truck startup. Uber acquired Otto for $680 million in stock with the agreement it would give the startup 20% of its trucking profits in August of last year, Recode reported.

GM reportedly dropped a ton of money on Cruise Automation, paying more than $1 billion, in cash and stock combined, in March of last year. Before being bought by GM, Cruise Automation was a self-driving-car startup based in San Francisco that was founded in 2013.

NOW WATCH: These self-driving trucks may be the key to Uber's future

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