German startup Vay has launched a remote-driving service in Las Vegas — and Europe could be next.

The rollout brings to market a concept known as “teledriving.” When users open the Vay app and request a ride, an electric vehicle comes to collect them. So far, so Uber — with one big exception: there’s nobody inside the car. Instead, it’s piloted to the pick-up spot by a remote driver.

The customer then takes the wheel for the journey to their destination. Once they depart, a teledriver takes control again.

It’s a model that Vay has pioneered. Last year, one of the startup’s vehicles became the first car to drive on a European public road without a person inside. With the Vegas service, Vay is now the only company to achieve the feat in both Europe and the US.

To turn the milestones into a successful business, Vay has combined two mobility models: ride-hailing for the pick-up and car rental for the journey. The tech, meanwhile, is billed as a midway point between conventional cars and autonomous vehicles.

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“Given recent challenges in the autonomy industry, automotive-grade teledriving can offer an alternative path to safe ‘driverless’ transportation, as a human driver is always in control,” Vay CEO Thomas von de Ohe told TNW.

Map showing the route that Vay's remotely-driven cars will take in Las Vegas