People kicking these food delivery robots is an early insight into how cruel humans could be to robots

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by mvea
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Starship Technologies builds autonomous food delivery robots. Facebook/Starship Technologies

The company behind tiny food delivery robots has admitted that people are kicking its machines — and it's an early insight into how cruel humans could be to robots.

Starship Technologies was launched in 2014 by Skype cofounders Ahti Heinla and Janus Friis. It makes 22-inch tall robots that roll along the pavement at 4mph delivering food to people.

Starship is just getting started and this week raised $25 million and appointed Airbnb veteran Lex Bayer as its new CEO. The ambition is to scale up and bring the robots to millions of people around the world.

Heinla told Business Insider that while most people like the robots, there are a few who take exception.

"Some people pass our robot and kick the robot a little bit," Heinla said. "That's not really a problem I think, if people have such anger management techniques that's fine by us, our robot just drives on."

It's not the first time Starship robots have encountered antipathy. A source told Business Insider in 2016 that a member of the public once attempted to rip the flag from one of the robots that was out on a delivery.

But Heinla is relaxed about the idea that people might seriously damage the machines. If anyone were to try to give one a real kicking, they are equipped with nine cameras, sirens, and tracking to within an inch.

The good news is that the vast majority of people respond positively to the machines. A spokesperson for Starship Technologies told Business Insider that out of the 15 million people the robots have encountered so far, 80% of people just ignored it, and the majority of the interactions were "extremely positive."

People abusing robots is not new. A 2015 study which a placed a robot in a Japanese shopping mall found that when few people were around, children displayed "anti-social behavior" towards the robot by "blocking its way, calling it names or even acting violently toward it."

Amid all the controversy about Google weaponising AI and fears over Boston Dynamics' door-opening robot dogs, perhaps we should actually be worried about how humans treat tech, rather than the other way around? Besides, after the AI revolution, our little mechanical friends might remember who was doing the kicking.

klyemar on June 9th, 2018 at 14:50 UTC »

They really gloss over the fact that this company is planning on putting thousands and thousands of little mobile, trackable cameras everywhere. I wonder how long it would be before law enforcement would try to get their hands on that valuable data.

Peruda on June 9th, 2018 at 12:39 UTC »

Clearly those people haven't seen the Animatrix.

bastywright on June 9th, 2018 at 11:50 UTC »

Why they kicking the robot ?