According to Yonhap News Agency on November 8, a man in South Korea was squeezed to death by a robotic arm that was performing an operation because the robotic arm thought he was a box of bell peppers.
The man involved was in his 40s and was working at an agricultural product center in South Gyeongsang Province. The factory has been using the robot to move food packages onto pallets for about five years, and it comes in handy when it's short-staffed. The man is said to be a technician for the robot manufacturer
It happened on the evening of the 7th. At that time, a robot was loading bell peppers in a transport box, and a man was checking the sensor of the lifting robot. However, due to a malfunction, the robotic arm mistook the man for a produce box and operated it with pliers, picking him up and suspending him in the air before placing his upper body on the conveyor belt. Eventually, his face and chest were crushed. The man was rushed to the hospital for rescue, but died due to ineffective treatment
The police are currently investigating the specific circumstances of the accident.
In addition, the police will also investigate whether the on-site management personnel of the distribution center were negligent in their work.
According to reports, this is not the first time that robots have injured people in South Korea. In March this year, a South Korean man in his 50s was seriously injured when he was trapped by a robot while working at an auto parts factory
If you look at the world, this is not the first incident where an automatic system has injured people.
In July last year, a 7-year-old Russian boy was participating in a chess match in Moscow when his finger was caught by a robot "opponent" and broke his phalange. The reason for this is because the robot thinks that the boy has violated the rules. Such an accident also makes people think more about the safety of the robot while being surprised.
Last month, an empty Cruise self-driving taxi hit a woman and continued to drag her forward. Seconds earlier, the woman had been hit by a hit-and-run driver and was lying in the path of the self-driving taxi.
The incident left the woman in critical condition and Cruise's operations were suspended amid an investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. As previously reported, Cruise made updates to its self-driving taxis to prevent similar incidents from happening.
In addition to the agricultural, industrial and transportation industries, the data center industry is also looking to robots to solve the problem of staff shortages. Last month, Microsoft launched an open search for a hardware automation team manager who would be responsible for overseeing the use of robotic systems across its data center network. The tech giant admitted that a Microsoft data center in Australia experienced an outage, exacerbated by a shortage of on-site staff.
Oracle has also been trialling robotic systems, including Boston Dynamics’ four-legged robot dog.
Meanwhile, at the Open Compute Project (OCP) Summit in October, META and Jtec demonstrated a robotic server cart capable of carrying an entire data center rack, weighing up to 1,500 kilograms. However, the system is still awaiting final security testing
Against the backdrop of an increasingly severe problem of population aging, South Korea’s adoption rate of robots ranks among the highest in the world. According to the "World Robots 2022" report released by the International Federation of Robotics, there is one industrial robot for every 10 Korean manufacturing workers.
Robot makers are one of the most popular stock classes in South Korea. South Korea's Doosan Robotics was listed on the Seoul market for the first time on October 5, and its stock price almost doubled. The company raised 421 billion won (approximately US$310 million) through its initial public offering, setting the Korean market's largest IPO so far this year
According to reports, robots have long been used in the industrial field to complete repetitive tasks. Doosan Robotics, however, focuses on producing robotic arms that work alongside humans to complete tasks beyond the factory floor. These collaborative robots are already being used for a variety of tasks, including making coffee, frying chicken, pouring beer, and handling luggage at airports.
Image source: Doosan Robot official website
The company’s revenue share is evenly distributed in major global markets, with North America, Europe and South Korea each accounting for about 30% of revenue. Major customers include Hyundai Motor, LG Electronics, French cosmetics manufacturer L’Oréal, etc.
Since the beginning of this year, the share price of Rainbow Robotics, funded by Samsung Electronics, has soared approximately 3.7 times. Samsung increased its stake in Rainbow Robot to 15% in March this year
Source: Morning News
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