I'm not a fan. Here's my take:
1 - this is no longer transportation. it's turning passengers into a captive audience.
2 - popups on the full-canopy HUD--the /entire/ glass is a display. how long do you think it will be before this gets sold as ad space? Now you don't go to billboards, they come to you.
3 - this is not a driving experience, this sounds more like a 'hostage' experience--to the AI and whatever "goodies" STA wants to subject you to.
If I want a concierge-like travel experience, I get on a tour bus or take a taxi and say "scenic route, tell me about your city".
This will also be a hacker's delight. Can you imagine how much damage bad actors can do once they gain access to vehicles with this tech? It's not an if, only a when.
Consider first just how great Dodge's mere theft deterrence has been, and now they think they can manage security at a much bigger scale?
Also consider, in the past 10 years, their website merely displaying their current model year offerings has typically been 8-12+ months out of date--and yet we're to believe they have the tech chops to do all this, and do it well?