@thufie many jurisdictions even the trash remains someones private property *until* an authorised person (such as the binman) takes it away.
I do wonder if the delivery robots are only ever deployed in big cities with good LTE signal and CCTV (so they can constantly report back to their masters the locations, and there is some kind of alarm sent to a control centre when one "drops off the radar" or is diverted from its route, and local CCTV would be monitored. As I've never seen one in my part of England (it would be a challenge to deploy them for many reasons, including the flaky LTE comms on *all* available mobile networks, especially outside the town centres)
@vfrmedia they are a huge pain for anyone with a wagon, cane, walker, or even just a wide stride. The pictures make them look smaller than they are. They weigh about 75lbs (35kg), have a tablet display on top in an attempt to humanize their robot, and they come to a full stop as a big heavy obstacle if anything is suboptimal about their surrounding environment. If this shit was a kind of wild game it'd be hunted to extinction by now.
@thufie isn't there a whole fuckton of tech workers in USA who have recently been laid off and are struggling to find jobs? I'm more amazed not even one of these has been diverted and stripped for parts, there's going to be things like microcontrollers, RAM, SD-cards, batteries etc in them..
@vfrmedia huoungry for delivery-bot RAM sticks ![]()
@vfrmedia It has to be some kind of legally protected class of thing, otherwise nobody would care if it says "Piloted by robert :)" on the display, that's unattended garbage for anyone to pick up.