Try GOLD - Free

US POLICE RARELY DEPLOY DEADLY ROBOTS TO CONFRONT SUSPECTS

AppleMagazine

|

AppleMagazine #580

The unabashedly liberal city of San Francisco became the unlikely proponent of weaponized police robots last week after supervisors approved limited use of the remote-controlled devices, addressing head-on an evolving technology that has become more widely available even if it is rarely deployed to confront suspects.

US POLICE RARELY DEPLOY DEADLY ROBOTS TO CONFRONT SUSPECTS

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted 8-3 to permit police to use robots armed with explosives in extreme situations where lives are at stake and no other alternative is available.

The authorization comes as police departments across the U.S. face increasing scrutiny for the use of militarized equipment and force amid a years-long reckoning on criminal justice.

The vote was prompted by a new California law requiring police to inventory military-grade equipment such as flashbang grenades, assault rifles and armored vehicles, and seek approval from the public for their use.

So far, police in just two California cities San Francisco and Oakland - have publicly discussed the use of robots as part of that process. Around the country, police have used robots over the past decade to communicate with barricaded suspects, enter potentially dangerous spaces and, in rare cases, for deadly force.

Dallas police became the first to kill a suspect with a robot in 2016, when they used one to detonate explosives during a standoff with a sniper who had killed five police officers and injured nine others.

The recent San Francisco vote, has renewed a fierce debate sparked years ago over the ethics of using robots to kill a suspect and the doors such policies might open. Largely, experts say, the use of such robots remains rare even as the technology advances.

Michael White, a professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University, said even if robotics companies present deadlier options at tradeshows, it doesn't mean police departments will buy them. White said companies made specialized claymores to end barricades and scrambled to equip body-worn cameras with facial recognition software, but departments didn't want them.

MORE STORIES FROM AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE'S SHIFT TO ESIM-ONLY DEVICES ACCELERATES GLOBAL TREND IN MOBILE CONNECTIVITY

Apple's decision to make its flagship iPhones eSIM-only in key markets is rippling across the mobile industry, accelerating a shift away from physical SIM cards and pushing carriers worldwide to adapt faster than expected.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

RESEARCHERS UNVEIL WORLD'S FIRST 6G CHIP CAPABLE OF OPERATING ACROSS ALL FREQUENCY BANDS

A team of researchers has announced a major breakthrough in wireless technology: the development of the world's first 6G chip designed to operate seamlessly across all frequency bands.

time to read

3 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MRBEAST REPORTEDLY PREPARING TO LAUNCH HIS OWN PHONE COMPANY AS CREATOR ECONOMY MOVES DEEPER INTO TECH

Jimmy Donaldson, better known as MrBeast, is reportedly working on one of his boldest ventures yet: launching a phone company.

time to read

3 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

META AND TIΚΤΟΚ WIN LEGAL CHALLENGE AGAINST EU TECH FEES, DEALING BLOW TO REGULATORS

Meta and TikTok have successfully challenged a European Union plan to impose new fees on large technology companies, marking a significant setback for EU regulators who have sought to make Big Tech shoulder more of the costs of digital oversight.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

NVIDIA REPORTEDLY LIMITS RTX 5060 SERIES SUPPLY TO BOARD PARTNERS IN BID TO KEEP PRICES STABLE

NVIDIA is once again flexing its market power to shape the GPU landscape.

time to read

3 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

NEURALINK SAYS 12 PEOPLE HAVE RECEIVED ITS BRAIN IMPLANTS

Elon Musk’s brain-computer interface startup Neuralink has confirmed that it has now implanted its device in 12 people, marking its most significant step yet toward testing the safety and functionality of its technology in humans.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE SETS SEPTEMBER 15 LAUNCH FOR IOS 26, IPADOS 26, MACOS 26 TAHOE, AND OTHER MAJOR SOFTWARE UPDATES

Apple has confirmed that its next generation of operating systems—including iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26 Tahoe, watchOS 13, and visionOS 3—will roll out globally on September 15, 2025.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE'S AI STRATEGY TAKES CENTER STAGE AS IPHONE 17 LAUNCHES WITHOUT FULL SIRI OVERHAUL

Apple's iPhone 17 lineup has debuted, accompanied by its first wave of Apple Intelligence features, but one of the most anticipated upgrades—an entirely AI-powered Siri—remains absent.

time to read

3 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE EXTENDS FREE SATELLITE CONNECTIVITY FOR IPHONE 14 AND 15 USERS BY ONE YEAR

Apple has announced that owners of the iPhone 14 and iPhone 15 will receive an extra year of free satellite connectivity, extending access to its Emergency SOS and related features through late 2025.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MICROSOFT TO INCORPORATE ANTHROPIC AI AS IT SHIFTS PART OF STRATEGY BEYOND OPENAI

Microsoft, one of OpenAl's largest backers and its exclusive cloud partner, is now preparing to integrate Al models from Anthropic into some of its products and services, signaling a strategic diversification in its artificial intelligence partnerships.

time to read

2 mins

September 12, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size