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Robophobic Airline Bans Humanoid Robots From Flights After Disruption

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Why This Matters

Southwest Airlines has implemented a ban on humanoid and animal robots on flights following incidents that caused delays and safety concerns. This move highlights the growing challenges of integrating robots into everyday environments, especially in sensitive areas like air travel. It underscores the need for clear regulations and safety protocols as robotic technology becomes more prevalent in society.

Key Takeaways

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Southwest Airlines appears to have become the first airline to enshrine a no-robots policy into their rulebook, after a Dallas business owner tried to take his 3.5-foot robot for a jaunt through the clouds.

First reported by CBS News, Aaron Mehdizadeh, owner of robot-rental company the Robot Studio, was on his way home from a trip to Las Vegas with his robot pal “Stewie” in tow. Rather than shipping the humanoid-robot or checking it as cargo, Mehdizadeh bought the robot its own seat, presumably to draw out a little publicity.

It wasn’t even the first such incident on a Southwest flight. Just days prior, a different humanoid robot passenger caused an hour-long delay on another Southwest flight, this one out of Oakland, California. In that episode, flight attendants went through a thorough checklist to ensure the robot would behave and that its battery didn’t pose a flight hazard.

The pair of incidents apparently caused such a stir that just two days after Mehdizadeh’s trip, Southwest announced a unilateral ban on humanoid- and animal-robots in the plane cabin, or even as checked luggage.

In a memo to CBS, Southwest said the new rule was put in place to comply with lithium-ion battery rules. Mehdizadeh, however, insists there’s something else going on, because Stewie’s battery was “essentially a laptop battery.”

More on robots: Hacker Takes Over Robot Lawnmower, Runs Over Innocent Man