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Home / Technology / Robot's Bone-Crushing Power Alleged in Lawsuit

Robot's Bone-Crushing Power Alleged in Lawsuit

23 Nov

•

Summary

  • Safety engineer alleges no formal safety procedures existed.
  • Robot's impact test showed force to fracture a human skull.
  • Company claims termination was for poor performance.
Robot's Bone-Crushing Power Alleged in Lawsuit

A former robotics safety engineer has filed a whistleblower lawsuit against Figure AI, alleging the company disregarded safety protocols while developing its humanoid robot. The suit claims that in the engineer's first week, he discovered a lack of formal safety procedures and inadequate oversight for the powerful robots.

Despite initial approval of a safety roadmap, company leadership allegedly dismissed concerns about the robots' capabilities. The lawsuit details that a robot's impact tests generated force more than twice that needed to fracture an adult human skull, and an incident where a robot malfunctioned and punched a refrigerator, narrowly missing an employee.

Figure AI has refuted these allegations, stating the safety technician was terminated for poor performance and that the claims are falsehoods. The company, which has seen significant valuation growth, is in a race with other firms to bring household humanoid robots to market, amidst growing concerns about the industry's rapid, unchecked development.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The lawsuit alleges Figure AI ignored safety procedures and risks associated with its humanoid robots, particularly regarding their power and speed.
Impact tests reportedly showed the robot generating force sufficient to fracture an adult human skull, and an incident involved a robot malfunctioning and punching a refrigerator.
Figure AI stated the safety technician was terminated for poor performance and that the lawsuit's claims are false and will be discredited in court.

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