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Rivian built an in-house AI assistant that integrates directly with vehicle controls using a hybrid edge–cloud AI stack and plans to debut it by year-end. The update comes as Morgan Stanley cuts the stock to Underweight on R2 launch risks and a slowing EV market.

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00:00It's Benzinga, bringing Wall Street to Main Street.
00:03Rivian has spent nearly two years developing an in-house AI assistant
00:07that fully integrates with vehicle controls
00:09rather than acting as a basic infotainment tool, according to TechCrunch.
00:13Its Palo Alto team built a model-agnostic architecture
00:17with software layers that coordinate workflows
00:19and manage control logic across systems.
00:22The EVmaker aims to debut the assistant by year-end
00:24and will provide updates during its AI and Autonomy Day livestream on December 11th.
00:30The assistant uses an in-house hybrid stack
00:32that combines edge and cloud AI with custom models
00:35and an orchestration layer that coordinates all system components.
00:39Morgan Stanley cut Rivian to underweight with a $12 target,
00:43citing risks around the R2 launch amid slowing EV adoption,
00:46loss of tax credits, and concerns about range and charging.
00:50Shares are up more than 33% year-to-date.
00:53For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.
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