Robocop has officially crossed over from the realm of science fiction into the realm of reality.
At least one police robot in Dubai could Singapore Archivesbe roaming the city's streets as early as 2017, according to the Dubai Media Office.
SEE ALSO: Police use facial recognition much more than you realizeThe robot -- complete with a set of arms, two eyes and a blue police cap -- is part of a larger effort in Dubai to have a squad of robo police around town by 2020, and was shown off at this year's GITEX Tech week.
"Robots could do the work of a police officer on ground at certain situations," Khalid Razooqi, the general director of Smart Department Dubai Police, said at a separate technology conference in June. "The project we are working on will involve robots interacting with people and performing some responsibilities that of a police officer."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The specific responsibilities these robots will take on are unclear, but they are likely to be service-oriented, as opposed to Terminator-like machines running around fighting crime.
Though that doesn't mean they won't be watching citizens.
The robots may be equipped with video and facial recognition technology, and could have the ability to ask newcomers what they're up to, according to the outlet 7days.
Dubai police have been geared toward tech-centric surveillance for some time, a pattern that mirrors police departments across the United States.
Back when Google Glass was a thing, the Dubai force had officers wear the glasses to snap photos of cars whose drivers had committed traffic violations.
If the officer got a photo of the vehicle's license plate, police could issue a ticket for the violation as well as run the plate number through a database of information about wanted drivers and vehicles.
Police also released an app in 2014 that allows residents to pay traffic fines and take videos of traffic violations and send them to the department for review.
The app records the location from which the user sent in the video, so police can quickly get to the area.
For now, those police are humans in uniform. Maybe soon, they'll be robots.
Our Summer Issue Poets Recommend by The Paris ReviewHow to check CPU tempBest sex toy deals (June 2025)Abandoned Books, Anonymous Sculpture, and Curves to the Apple by The Paris Review'Palworld' on sale: Save 10% on Steam until Thursday at 1 p.m. ETSoftball Season by Sophie Haigney'Palworld' on sale: Save 10% on Steam until Thursday at 1 p.m. ETIn Occupied Cities, Time Doesn’t Exist: Conversations with Bucha Writers by Ilya KaminskyLike Disaster by Rachel Heise BoltenGhosts, the Grateful Dead, and Earth Room by The Paris ReviewWordle today: The answer and hints for January 24Emma Cline, Dan Bevacqua, and Robert Glück Recommend by The Paris ReviewNYT's The Mini crossword answers for January 24Solstice Diaries by Ellyn GaydosLike Disaster by Rachel Heise BoltenBill Gates and group of tech heavyweights announce $1 billion clean energy fundBest tablet deal: The Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 is 30% off at AmazonWordle today: The answer and hints for January 24TikTok could allow 30Jon Stewart returns to 'The Daily Show' as Monday night host Geely and Renault partner to develop gasoline engines and hybrid technology · TechNode AI Agents Explained: The Next Evolution in Artificial Intelligence Meituan allows users to upload short videos as competition with Douyin heats up · TechNode Biden administration to impose narrow limits on China tech investment by 2024 · TechNode Best Amazon TV deals: More on sale ahead of Prime Day than usual AliExpress partners with PingPong to provide cross India rejects BYD’s $1 billion EV factory proposal, cites security concerns · TechNode Nio delays production of proprietary batteries to ease financial pressure · TechNode Inspur forecasts a sharp 60 Meituan introduces in Alibaba’s intelligent services subsidiary launches new product to serve e All the changes Apple made for iOS 26 beta 2 AI company Cloudwalk’s large Court date set for NetEase and Blizzard’s $43.5 million compensation case · TechNode Temu to expand platform access to local sellers in the US · TechNode Baidu launches SynClub, a social network populated by "AI friends" · TechNode Huawei plans a 5G smartphone comeback by the end of 2023 · TechNode JD debuts big model Yanxi, official launch expected in August · TechNode Intel launches Habana Gaudi 2 deep learning accelerator card for Chinese market · TechNode Apple expands sales reach in China with launch of mini
1.9932s , 8204.4453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Singapore Archives】,New Knowledge Information Network