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Auto News: It was supposed to be a routine night drive, but what happened on that dark stretch of road in Kobe, Japan, has left both engineers and spiritualists stunned. An electric vehicle, running on autopilot, suddenly diverted from its path and drove deep into a forested area without any human command. The GPS was off, the internet was disabled, and the driver had blacked out — yet the car moved forward with eerie precision.
Minutes later, it came to a smooth halt in front of an old, forgotten grave. Investigators later discovered the grave belonged to the car’s previous owner, a man who had died months earlier. Shockingly, his frequently visited locations were still stored in the car’s system. As silence hung in the air, one question remained — was it just leftover code… or a ghost in the machine?
Late at night in Kobe, Japan, an EV in autopilot mode changed its route mid-journey. Without warning, it left the highway and took a narrow forest road. Minutes later, it calmly stopped inside a desolate graveyard. No collision, no brakes applied. The silence was terrifying, the precision — impossible to ignore.
When 25-year-old Yoshida regained consciousness, he found himself surrounded by tombstones. His hands trembled, heart raced. He swore he hadn’t touched the wheel. There was no signal, no active GPS, and the car’s battery was down to 9%. How did it know exactly where to stop?
EV manufacturer Shino Motors initially labeled it a “navigation malfunction.” But system logs told another story. The vehicle had followed a pre-recorded route — not entered by the current owner. That location matched the grave of the car’s previous owner. A strange coincidence or something far deeper?
Electric vehicles often store passive user data, like frequent locations and drive patterns. In this case, the car had retained the previous owner’s cemetery visits. The data was never erased during resale. Somehow, the system reverted to that pattern, even with the new owner behind the wheel.
The story set Japanese social media on fire. Was it artificial intelligence gone rogue or an echo of a lost soul? Experts say, “Machines act on logic, but data sometimes carries shadows of behavior.” Can a car make emotional decisions? Or did something beyond logic take the wheel?
This incident has sparked serious privacy and safety debates in the EV industry. If past data remains, future owners are unknowingly haunted by digital ghosts. Governments are now demanding stricter data wipes in second-hand vehicles. Because what stays in the system… might someday drive you home.