Lodi News-Sentinel

Amazon has patented a system that would put workers in a cage, on top of a robot

- By Matt Day and Benjamin Romano

A patent Amazon has received would pair humans and machines. In this case, the humans would be in a cage.

Illustrati­ons that accompany the patent, which was granted by the U.S. Patent and Trademark office in 2016, show a cage-like enclosure around a small work space sitting atop the kind of robotic trolleys that now drive racks of shelves around Amazon warehouses.

The patent was called “an extraordin­ary illustrati­on of worker alienation, a stark moment in the relationsh­ip between humans and machines” by researcher­s who highlighte­d it in a study published Friday.

Amazon says it never implemente­d the technology and has no plans to, but the design appeared to be an effort to allow humans to safely enter robot-only zones in Amazon’s highly-automated depots to make repairs or pick up dropped objects.

In an Amazon facility in Kent, for example, 750-pound robots topped with shelves scoot around an area surrounded by high chain-link fences, bringing merchandis­e like iPhone cases and coffee mugs to waiting employees who place or retrieve items from windows built into the fence.

If an unauthoriz­ed human strays into the robot-only zone, the company says, an alarm is triggered and the devices are designed to shut down to avoid colliding with the person. Amazon, in its patent, suggested a way around that firm boundary between human and robot territory.

“There may be circumstan­ces where it is necessary for human operators to traverse, or otherwise go into, an active work space,” says the patent, which credits eight inventors in the Boston area, home of Amazon Robotics, which was formed through the acquisitio­n of Kiva Systems in 2012.

Lindsay Campbell, an Amazon spokeswoma­n, said speculatio­n about the company’s use of the patent was “misguided.”

“Like many companies, we file a number of forward-looking patent applicatio­ns,” she said. Many don’t see the light of day as finished products, particular­ly at Amazon, which encourages employees to experiment and invent. Such a cage-like device is not in use in any Amazon fulfillmen­t centers, Campbell said.

After this story was published online, Dave Clark, who oversees Amazon’s warehouses and logistics work as senior vice president of operations, weighed in on Twitter to say the company had no plans to use the contraptio­n.

Still, the company’s patents often spark conjecture­s about Amazon’s technology and business plans. Other Amazon patents have mulled using wristbands to track workers’ hand movements, dropping packages from drones 25 feet in the air, or having drones themselves link up to form a kind of floating warehouse.

A reference to the cage patent appears in a lengthy case study of the various systems that make up Amazon’s Echo ecosystem, published Friday by Kate Crawford, a cofounder of the AI Now Institute at New York University, and Vladan Joler, a professor in the new media department at the University of Novi Sad in Serbia. Crawford is also a principal researcher at Microsoft Research.

Crawford and Joler, in the research work titled “Anatomy of an AI System,” describe the patent:

“It depicts a metal cage intended for the worker, equipped with different cybernetic add-ons, that can be moved through a warehouse by the same motorized system that shifts shelves filled with merchandis­e,” they write. “Here, the worker becomes a part of a machinic ballet, held upright in a cage which dictates and constrains their movement.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States