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Google’s latest patent would allow it to control a robot army

Qz

January 30, 2024

Google’s ambitions in the field of robots are no secret, but this latest patent may be one of company’s most interesting yet. Essentially, the patent describes configuring a bunch of robots “to receive information from the computing component via the network associated with instructions for performing one or more tasks.” This means you would be able to control a swarm of robots from anywhere in the world. 

After getting a patent for giving robots personalities last month, Google now wants to unleash an army of Rodney Dangerfield bots on the world. In a patent awarded today, the company outlines a system for “allocating tasks to a plurality of robotic devices.” This sounds innocuous enough—it could mean linking a series of factory robots together, or perhaps a gaggle of Roombas to clean a large house—but the potential is much greater. Google’s patent outlines methods for connecting a series of robots over the cloud to complete tasks, but it doesn’t put a limit on how many robots could be managed at once. The patent suggests that the robots could be controlled by a smartphone—Google’s mobile operating system is called Android, after all—with tasks doled out based on each robot’s ability to complete them. Someone could theoretically control the botswarm from anywhere in the world.

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