惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

T
Tenable Blog
月光博客
月光博客
雷峰网
雷峰网
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
博客园 - 司徒正美
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
V
Visual Studio Blog
H
Help Net Security
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
爱范儿
爱范儿
W
WeLiveSecurity
J
Java Code Geeks
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
H
Hacker News: Front Page
T
Threatpost
The Cloudflare Blog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
Latest news
Latest news
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
小众软件
小众软件
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
A
Arctic Wolf
B
Blog RSS Feed
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
I
InfoQ
C
Check Point Blog
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
V
V2EX
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
D
DataBreaches.Net
F
Fortinet All Blogs
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
IT之家
IT之家
K
Kaspersky official blog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com

Joe Wilkins Archives - Futurism

FBI Director Kash Patel Says AI Has Stopped Numerous Violent Attacks Against America. We’d Love to See a Single Whiff of Evidence Video Shows Amazon Drone Dropping Package Into Pond Ordinary People Fear AI, While the Tech Leaders Working to Create a Permanent Underclass Say They’re Extremely Psyched About It Busy Roadways Clogged as Waymo Becomes Stumped by Small Puddle Passengers Groan as Robot Passenger Causes Hour-Long Delay at Oakland Airport Zuckerberg Trying to Simulate Human Biology at the Cellular Level Startup Says It’s Invented a Beanie That Reads Your Mind Man Says His Waymo Ditched Him at the Airport Before He Could Get His Luggage Out of the Trunk, Refused to Return Frontier AI Models Giving Specific, Actionable Instructions to Perpetrate Bioterror Attack The “Pentastack” of Illegal Drugs That Looksmaxxers Like Clavicular Are Taking to Enjoy a Night Out Sounds Like a One-Way Trip to the Hospital Chinese Court Rules That a Worker Cannot Be Replaced by AI There’s Something Bizarre About the Offices of AI Startups Trump’s US Forest Service Spraying Deadly Toxins on America’s Woodlands Wild Video Shows Ukrainian Troops Evacuate Babushka With a Military Robot AV Companies Might be in Trouble Now As Cops Start Ticketing Driverless Cars Elon Musk Just Got Badly Humiliated in Court If You Bet on Polymarket, This New Study May Cause You Physical Pain Mark Zuckerberg Just Got Shot Down by China, Again Startup Says It Can Read Your Brain Signals Using a Pair of Headphones AI Spy Cameras Suddenly Blanketing America Man Trapped in Dystopian Nightmare Thanks to AI Surveillance Cameras Flagging His Every Move Police Are Using AI Camera Networks to Stalk Women Woman Convicted for Attacking Police With Swarm of Furious Bees A Tiny Town Is Building So Many Data Centers That There’ll Be Almost Nothing Else Left The War in Iran Is Causing China to Sell So Many Solar Panels That Your Jaw Will Drop Waymo Has a Bike Lane Problem Ransomware Negotiator Pleads Guilty to Deploying Ransomware Himself America Trembles as Transportation Secretary Announces Plans for Air Traffic Controllers to Lean on AI Tools Experts Warn of AI Swarms Hijacking Democracy With Fake Citizens Climate Scientists Shake Their Heads as First US City Running Completely Out of Water Unions Attack AI for Menacing Human Jobs Waymo Baffles Police When it Plows Through Taped Off Crime Scene Tesla Quietly Buys Mysterious $2 Billion Entity The Number of Drones Being Deployed to Surveil Anti-Trump Protestors Is Staggering The US Military Just Arrested One of Its Soldiers for Making Ghoulish Polymarket Bets, and It Shows How Deep the Moral Rot of Prediction Markets Really Goes Tech Companies Are Using Insidious Tactics to Build Data Centers on Indigenous Lands, Activists Say Norway Approves Autonomous Buses for Public Roads Trump’s Huge AI Data Center Project Is Falling Apart Behind the Scenes You’ll Spill Your Juice When You Learn How Many of Florida’s Orange Trees This Incurable Bacteria Has Already Infected SpaceX’s IPO Plan Will Give Elon Musk Ironclad Rule Over the Resulting Empire Leak Shows ICE Planning to Use Facial Recognition Glasses to Identify Targets in Real Time Today Is the Day Anthropic Promised That Fully Autonomous Employees Would Be Tearing Through the Business World JPMorganChase Data Center Gets $77 Million Handout to Create Grand Total of One Job Nvidia CEO Loses His Cool at Tough Question CEO of $1.5 Billion AI Startup Accused of Massive Fraud by Justice Department Madison Square Garden Reportedly Used Facial Recognition to Stalk Trans Woman For Two Years China Is Starting to Pull Ahead of US in AI Race Hospital Reuses Syringes, Infects Hundreds of Children With HIV Tesla Driver Alarmed as FSD Takes Him Directly Into the Path of an Oncoming Train Study Finds AI Use Eats Away at Users’ Confidence in Their Own Brains Democrats Warned Not to Upset Multi-Million Dollar AI Lobbyists, Even Though It’d Be a Slam Dunk With Voters City Council Wrecked in Voter Bloodbath After Allowing New Data Center Things You Told ChatGPT or Claude My Have Already Doomed You in Court Wild Video Shows Delivery Robots Causing Havoc, Getting Obliterated Robot Dogs Patrolling Precious Crops as Food Crisis Deepens Pentagon Disturbed as Its Fleet of Drones Is Left Bobbing in the Ocean When Elon Musk’s Starlink Fails NAACP Sues Elon Over His Noxious AI Data Center Teens Alarmed at What AI Is Doing to Their Minds Video Shows Amazon Delivery Drone Dropping Package Directly Onto Concrete, Smashing Its Delicate Contents Starbucks’ Baffling ChatGPT Collab Treats Customers Like Empty, Soulless Venti Cups Man Engineers Giant Robot Hand to Smash His Enemies Man Who Threw Molotov at Sam Altman’s House Warned AI Will Exterminate Humankind Trump Moves to Let Coal Companies Pollute Waterways With Their Toxic Slag Psychological Research Finds Trump Supporters Are Not Doing Well Recent Grads Say AI Is Making It Impossible to Find a Job CDC Caught Burying Report on Real Effects of COVID Vaccine A New Study Found Something Disturbing About the Way Delivery Workers Drive to Get You Your Burrito Man Suing City After AI Camera Flags Him For Wrongful Arrest Heat Waves Are Getting So Brutal That They Just Kill You, Full Stop There’s a Glaring Safety Problem With Nuclear Energy Startups Research Finds That AI Has Already Replaced Work for 20 Percent of Jobs Scientists Set New Record for Solar Cell Efficiency Gen Z Sabotaging AI at Work So It Won’t Take Their Job Trump Hires Orbital Towing Company to Build Space Interceptors Psychologists Found Something Horrible About the Kind of Men Seeking Trad Wives To Get Swole, Teens Are Pumping Themselves Full of Drugs Meant for Fattening Cows for the Slaughterhouse DOGE Made Drastic Cuts to a Global Vaccine Assistance Program. Now There’s a Deadly Measles Outbreak in Bangladesh AI Is Causing Healthcare Costs to Surge There’s a Mass Rebellion Against AI in the Workplace People Who Lose Their Job to AI Are in for a World of Pain, Goldman Sachs Report Finds OpenAI Says Not to Worry About UBI, Because It Has Another Idea Economists Starting to Admit They May Have Been Wrong About AI Never Replacing Human Jobs Naked Man Bursts Into Tesla Service Center With a Shotgun Sam Altman’s Coworkers Say He Can Barely Code and Misunderstands Basic Machine Learning Concepts College Students Losing Ability to Participate in Class Discussions Due to Offloading Their Thinking to AI Elon Musk Secretly Shared His Number One Priority at Tesla and It Really Says It All Polymarket Has Turned Our Climate Apocalypse Into a Casino Groups Set Up to Shill AI and Data Centers Are Pouring Huge Sums of Money Into the Midterm Elections Nonprofit Research Groups Disturbed to Learn That OpenAI Has Secretly Been Funding Their Work AI Expert Says It’s Time to Stop Freaking Out About AI Taking Our Jobs Man Caught Sleeping Behind the Wheel While FSD Tesla Cruises the Streets After Decadent Feast of Wine and Pizza China Cracking Down on the Types of AI That Are Tearing America Apart Target Warns That If Its AI Shopping Agent Makes an Expensive Mistake, You’ll Have to Pay for It America’s Largest City Hospital System Ready to Start Replacing Radiologists With AI, Its CEO Says EPA Now Values Human Lives at $0 Two OpenAI Execs, Including CEO of AGI, Going on Medical Leave The Moon Astronauts Brought Along USB Stick-Sized Living Samples of Their Own Tissue Insurance Companies Already Deploying AI Systems to Deny Claims Faster Than Ever Before Delivery Robot Companies in Trouble as Bot Become Targets for Vandalism Almost Half of US Data Centers That Were Supposed to Open This Year Slated to Be Canceled or Delayed
Failing Robot Cop Company Knightscope Now Publishing Bizarre AI Slop Fan Fiction About Its Robots Solving Absurd Crimes
Joe Wilkins · 2026-06-24 · via Joe Wilkins Archives - Futurism

Sign up to see the future, today

Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech

For its 13 years in businesses, robot security company Knightscope has weathered a remarkable run of self-inflicted disasters.

Founded “in response to the tragic shootings at Sandy Hook, the Boston bombings, and the attacks of 9/11” — that’s taken verbatim from the company’s About page — Knightscope has transformed from a pie-in-the-sky robotics startup to a corporate has-been whose servos continue to fire despite an ever-lengthening track record of failure. Since listing on the NASDAQ index in early 2022, the company’s stock has plummeted from an all-time high closing price of $1,070 to just $2 in June of 2026, for losses of over 99 percent.

Tellingly, the company’s flagship product is also its most visible flop: the K5 Autonomous Security Robot. Taking the form of a 420-pound plasticky egg, K5s have mainly made headlines through extraordinary mishaps like drowning in a fountain and running down a 16-month-old-toddler. In Huntington Park, California, a K5 unit refused to help a woman attempting to report an emergency through the robot’s on-board emergency-alert button. Rather than summoning police — pretty much the bot’s only job — the K5 told the woman to “step out of the way” so that it could continue its slow-motion patrol down the sidewalk.

Not even the notoriously tech-obsessed NYPD renewed its contract with Knightscope, probably because the K5 required constant monitoring by human cops to protect it from the wear and tear of New York City. It’s not wowing small-town law enforcement, either: a local police department in Ohio sacked the bot after it spent an entire year without helping with an arrest or issuing a single ticket.

Predictably, Knightscope executives are now turning to artificial intelligence, telling investors in their Q1 2026 earnings report that AI will rewire the robotics industry and help make the company’s human security operations more efficient.

Maybe AI will eventually make the K5 a worthy partner for police departments whose bloated budgets already include extensive carve-outs for AI cameras and surveillance drones. But for now, Knightscope’s most visible AI deployment seems to be a series of bizarre, self-published fan fiction depicting its robots on the frontlines of a suburban dystopia called “Sentinel Shores.”

The company describes describes “The Knightscope Chronicles” as a “gripping collection of true crime-fighting short stories” that are “inspired by actual events.” In each installment, the company’s security bots and surveillance devices “empower businesses, law enforcement, and communities to prevent and solve crimes.”

Reading the stories, though, it strains credulity to imagine that they’re actually based on real events in any meaningful way. Each installment feels like a fever dream of absurd fear mongering about crime, meant to hype Knightscope’s brand of high-tech surveillance and divorced from reality in unintentionally comical ways.

The prose in each story is deeply stilted, featuring the distinctive cadence of an AI chatbot. Each tableau is also illustrated with generative AI, resulting in freakish scenes rife with garbled text and hallucinated details, like a diminutive squad car parked inside a police station filled with surveillance feeds.

An AI-generated illustration by Knightscope showing what seems to be a situation room or police station with large screens. There are nonsensical details, like clearly AI-generated text and a miniature police car parked indoors.

Perhaps the most deranged story comes in Knightscope Chronicle #8, which describes a terrifying man-ogre — his “giant shape” is “too broad, frame crooked and wrong,” the story insists, his “face twisted” and “jaw offset, one eye higher than the other” — as he bursts into a gas station, slays the clerk with a nail gun, and then terrorizes a random barefoot woman.

She hides in the restroom, but the perpetrator smashes through the door using — we are not kidding — his face: the story describes “his face smashing against the door, grunts wet and awful between blows,” prompting the woman to flee out the window. The man-orc pursues her, blasting off nails that slam “into the asphalt feet from where she runs.”

We should pause here to mention that Knightscope included an AI-generated image of what the murderer looks like. We’ll just let it speak for itself:

A Knightscope image showing a hulking, orc-like criminal clutching a nail gun as a makeshift weapon.

Fortunately, the woman soon happens across a K1 Hemisphere, a police call box by Knightscope that takes the form of a silver orb, which she uses to beg for help.

“You’re not alone. Stay on the line,” a voice assures her, which sounds like horrible advice when a homicidal fiend is shooting a barrage of nails in your direction. “Officers are on the way.”

In another stroke of luck, the woman then happens across a K5 Autonomous Security Robot. In real life, that’s the same model that drowned itself in a fountain and got dumped by the NYPD after its trial period was up. Yet in the Knightscope Chronicles, it performs its job with crack-shot efficiency by contacting dispatch, who summon Border Patrol.

Wait, what? Border Patrol? Yes, just roll with it. In the Fox News anti-logic of Knightscope’s tale, Border Patrol shows up in the nick of time, shoots the man with a taser, and when that’s unsuccessful, rips him apart with “a hundred rounds tearing through the trees.”

“The giant staggers, flinches, then finally collapses into the dirt,” the story continues. “Silent. Finished.”

In an email to Futurism, Knightscope’s director of business development Chris Garza didn’t provide any direct evidence that the outrageous tales were true, saying only that the stories were “inspired by real-life events but have been adapted into short stories to protect the privacy of the organizations and individuals involved.”

Frankly, that’s hard to imagine. Nail guns are impractical as weapons and have only rarely been used in homicides. In fact, we couldn’t find a single case in which a nail gun was used to kill a clerk at a gas station, nevermind in an incident involving a police robot.

It’s also worth noting that even in this seemingly fictional world, there’s nothing remarkable about the battery of Knightscope tech on display. Both the callbox the woman uses and the K5 robot essentially serve the role of a cell phone or security camera; all they do is summon real help from emergency responders, who do all the heavy lifting.

We’re similarly skeptical that the company’s other tales were “inspired by actual events.” In Knightscope Chronicles #7, a flamboyant con artist known as “Baby Bob” defrauds the elderly — until he’s caught by another K5 robot, which spots him as he “peeled off a mask” that had been hiding his identity. Again, we can’t find any real-world cases that involves a police robot seeing a scammer peeling off a mask.

Other irregularities abound. In Knightscope Chronicles #5, City Hall receives a threatening call to “keep your eyes on the bridge Halloween morning,” and deploys yet another K5 to monitor the area (somebody clearly needs to audit the Sentinel Shores police budget). The bot soon locks in on a suspicious man, using “thermal imaging” to detect a gun under his clothes, and recording him as he mutters menacing phrases like “they’ll regret ignoring me.” As the story goes: “law enforcement intercepted him within 5 minutes,” finding a “scoped rifle” somehow hidden under his outfit, along with plans for a massacre.

If you think about this one for a few seconds, it makes no sense. If City Hall knew when the threatening man would be on the bridge, why waste the money deploying a K5 when officers were available anyway? Such is the logic of AI-generated slop stories, apparently.

Asked to share the inspiration behind the Knightscope Chronicles, Garza referred us to a list of the company’s “crime fighting wins,” which includes vaguely-worded achievements like improving “feeling of safety” and enabling “perimeter expansion.”

If you squint, some of the company’s success stories vaguely track with the Knightscope Chronicles — one about a Knightscope robot assisting “a real estate owner in stopping a fraudulent insurance claim” could be an incredibly loose inspiration for Baby Bob, for example, at least if you ignore virtually every specific detail of the story.

But let’s be real, that’s a pretty big stretch. It’s also worth noting all but two of Knightscope’s crime fighting wins are presented without sources or third-party testimony. And the two with evidence are extremely underwhelming: one is a statement from the city manager of Huntington Park, California explaining that “the K5 robot is having a positive impact on crime and nuisance activity” at a local park. The other involves a Knightscope unit helping end a “multi-year police search” by providing cops with a license plate number, vehicle details, and identifiable video of a suspect caught in the act. That sounds promising, until you learn that the man police apprehended wasn’t some Shrek-looking serial killer, but was instead “responsible for dumping boats on city streets,” whatever that means.

In other words, it’s hard to see how those tepid examples could inspire the hell world of Sentinel Shores.

As embarrassing as the Chronicles are, they reveal something important about how this kind of surveillance infrastructure is sold. The robots don’t need to work particularly well to help Knightscope secure its contracts; they just need to address a vibe that criminals are everywhere, especially your sleepy suburban town. Each Chronicle shares the thesis that monstrous, random crime is inevitable — and only a permanent technological presence can contain it.

In his email statement, Knightscope’s Garza assured us that “given the recent acquisition and corporate strategy of building the nation’s first Autonomous Security Force, an all-new website is due out soon.”

What that “first Autonomous Security Force” might encompass is probably a longer and more unsettling story. Though we’re sad to hear that the Knightscope Chronicles may be fading from the public eye, we’re even more horrified at the thought of an autonomous surveillance regime run by a company which felt comfortable publishing them in the first place.

More on robots: Autonomous Robots Confirmed to Have Killed Human Soldiers