If you keep watching the video, you'll see you're again incorrect.
The first section of the video is with the car in a fixed stationary position to demonstrate how it can activate safety even in an immobile state.
At the end of the video, they show how it breaks because it detects a lateral incoming object around a blind corner, preventing door collision all together.
This isn't unique to Audi either, other brands like Volvo have oncoming traffic detection around corners and will break to avoid it.
Again, Tesla actually lacks some sensors that these other brands which causes Tesla's to actually have a greater blind spot. E.g most of these cars can "see around corners" whereas a Tesla cannot. This is in part because Tesla has removed radar (and the ultrasonic sensors are too short range on any vehicle). Radar was what allowed it to do bounce detection around obstacles that obscured pure vision based approaches.
The first section of the video is with the car in a fixed stationary position to demonstrate how it can activate safety even in an immobile state.
At the end of the video, they show how it breaks because it detects a lateral incoming object around a blind corner, preventing door collision all together.
This isn't unique to Audi either, other brands like Volvo have oncoming traffic detection around corners and will break to avoid it.
Again, Tesla actually lacks some sensors that these other brands which causes Tesla's to actually have a greater blind spot. E.g most of these cars can "see around corners" whereas a Tesla cannot. This is in part because Tesla has removed radar (and the ultrasonic sensors are too short range on any vehicle). Radar was what allowed it to do bounce detection around obstacles that obscured pure vision based approaches.