Podcast Banner

Podcasts

Paul, Weiss Waking Up With AI

The Year of the Robot

As robotic capabilities have progressed from toys and vacuum cleaners to highly advanced robotic humanoids, so too have the associated challenges and legal implications. This week on “Waking Up With AI,” Katherine Forrest explores these developments, as well as her personal experiences with Tesla’s Optimus Pro robot.

Stream here or subscribe on your
preferred podcast app:

Episode Transcript

Katherine Forrest:Hey, folks. Welcome to today's episode of “Waking Up With AI,” a Paul, Weiss podcast. I'm Katherine Forrest, and yes, it is true. We have another solo episode today. Anna and I are exchanging these solo episodes, as we are in different time zones and have not yet been able to get synced up. We were just laughing about it this morning because her time zone is such that only at the very early morning hours is it reasonable to ask her to join me in doing something. So I'm going to do it alone here. And so I thought as a result of that, that I would take the opportunity to talk about something that's an experience that I had personally and to tell you all about it, because it is relevant to both the AI conversations that we've all been having in these episodes over the, now, year almost. And also, about some of the legal issues that could come up with some of these things.

So I ordered a robot, and that's what we're going to be talking about today. Now, we all know that toys in the form of various kinds of robots have been around for a while, and most of those toys were not in fact robots. They looked like robots, but they were just battery-powered things that sort of walked across a floor. Then in the recent years, there have been increasing amounts of sophisticated kit robots that have come out, but robotics in a basic sense, not in sort of a cognitive AI sense necessarily. But we're moving away from that. There's actually today — this is not by the way the robot that I ordered — but we're moving away from even toys that are simply just mechanical-looking robots to things that are more aligned with different kinds of cognitive capabilities.

So there's this robot puppy called Loona, L-O-O-N-A, that is available online, and it's based actually on ChatGPT-4o. It's enabled by that. It's not made by the company, but it's enabled by ChatGPT-4o, and it responds to voice commands and recognizes commands in multiple languages. And it can also chase laser pens, and it can fetch special balls that are sort of shaped in a geometric, geodesic kind of shape that you can see on, for instance, Amazon. And it also, interestingly, has a home monitor. So let's just hope that if anybody gives Loona the puppy to anybody else that they tell them that there's a home monitor camera inside of Loona who can double as a monitoring device. But anyway, these are all toys of one sort or another. And I have actually ordered a number of these kind of robotic toys, and the increasingly more sophisticated ones, over the last couple of years for various kinds of children and nieces and nephews and this and that. And so I have been watching this area quite a lot.

But I also had ordered one of those Roombas, the grown-up world of robots, the devices that have some kind of robotic capability in them. But that's also not the basis of my story today. But let's talk a little bit about the Roomba because it sort of is leading us from toys to adult robotic uses. And the Roomba started off as a vacuum cleaner that, when it would run into things, it sometimes could get around them and sometimes could map rooms, but sometimes would actually have a hard time. It could get stuck on long kinds of carpet. A lot of that's really interestingly been solved. And now you can actually get a Roomba that will, and by the way, Roomba is one type of this kind of robotic home vacuum cleaner. There are actually about 12 or even more companies that make these. And so that's just the name that I happen to use because I happen to have one of these. But now you can get these vacuum cleaners that can climb stairs, they can pick up socks, they can avoid obstacles, they can get over things, they can avoid your pets, they don't sort of eat your cat anymore. I don't think they ever really ate your cat, but in any event, you get the idea. And of course, these Roomba vacuum cleaners are only a small step from what also exists in the form of robotic lawn mowers, which you can get and they can map the perimeter of your home. A lot of it's based on LiDAR technology. They can avoid obstacles, go up hills, go over rocks, things like that. And now there are actually these kinds of robotics that are in all kinds of forms for human arms and legs that go over a robotic exoskeleton, if you will, or ectoskeleton that will go over your arm or leg and help individuals who are having issues with flexing or the electrical connections actually be able to do that. And of course, many of you who may have been to some airport lounges recently will have seen some of the robotic bussing capabilities that are now in airport lounges. But in South Korea, where I was about almost a year ago, in South Korea they had robotic bussers, as well as you could order your food from robotic waitstaff.