Crime-Fighting Robots Deployed in Silicon Valley
The K5 security robot is equipped with a camera and sensors, and roves around gathering and analyzing data about activity happening within the area.
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – Crime-fighting robots that look like they could be a distant cousin of R2-D2 are being deployed as a new kind of security guard in the Silicon Valley.
“The vast majority of people see it and go, ‘Oh my God, that’s so cute.’ We’ve had people go up and hug it, and embrace it for whatever reason,” Stacy Stephens, co-founder of robot-maker Knightscope, based here, told CBS affiliate KPIX-TV.
The robots are unarmed, but they are imposing at 5-feet tall and weighing 300 pounds.
“The first thing that’s going to happen is the burglar is going to spot the robot. And unfortunately, criminals are inherently lazy. They’re not looking for something that’s going to be confrontational, they’re looking for something that’s going to be an easy target,” Stephens said, who is co-founder of Knightscope. “They see the robot and maybe they move down to the next place down the street.”
The security robots are autonomous, meaning they operate on their own. They don’t chase a bad guy down or make arrests.
They are designed to avoid confrontations. When someone steps right in front of one, the robot will stop. Then it will redirect its path around the person. All the while, sending video inside to a control center where a human is monitoring.
If a would-be burglar persists, Stephens said, “Then, the robot is looking at the video, listening for glass breakage, any loud sound that breaking in would cause. We’ll get the license plate, picture of the vehicle, geotag location, and time.”
The robots patrol using a similar technology as the self-driving Google car.
“It has a LIDAR (light image detection and ranging) that’s doing a 3D map,” Stephens said. “It will geofence itself and give itself a perimeter within which it will operate. And it moves around within that perimeter freely and it chooses its own path.”
If someone decides to attack the robot, it could get uncomfortable. When first confronted, they let out a loud chirp and notify the control center. The chirps will get louder and louder as the threat persists.
“A very, very loud alarm,” said Stephens. “Think of a car alarm but much more intense.”
The security robots are now patrolling in the Bay Area.
The Knightscope K5s are in effect at an undisclosed location in the Silicon Valley.
“Unfortunately, I cannot share who it is,” Stephens said. “Soon you will see them everywhere.”
The makers of the robot said they have a long waiting list of about four dozen companies waiting for a K5. They expect to put many more of these robots in place sometime next year.
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