• RubberDuck
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    526 months ago

    Excellent way to get around labor laws. Have a robot controlled by a poor amuck in a low wage country and ignore the labor laws in the country of the robot.

    • @Zron@lemmy.world
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      216 months ago

      I could actually see this being useful for dangerous working environments like steelworks or inside nuclear facilities. As long as the control system is on a separate intranet that’s properly air gapped.

      You should still pay the operator their full wage though. The human still needs all of the technical knowledge to do the job, you’re just removing most of the physical risk.

      • Annoyed_🦀
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        186 months ago

        The issue here is Tesla didn’t made the robot for that, but instead Melon Husk promised a personal robot butler that can do anything asked. If he came out on day one promised a remote controlled robot for hazardous situation or for warehouse work, like most robotic company are, he won’t get shit on this much.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        66 months ago

        I like my idea for kaiju sized Rock-em, Sock-em Robots better. We could host robot battles between skilled karate practitioners and put them live on television.

        What, it’s been done already?

        Ah, crap.

    • @Magister@lemmy.world
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      106 months ago

      About happening for years in Japan IIRC, but in a good way, especially with physically handicape people, they control robots to take order and serve dishes etc in restaurant. It allows people to work, be busy, earn money, etc.

    • snooggums
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      36 months ago

      That would be perfectly in line with the original meaning of robot.