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Medicine Robotics Technology

24 Amazon Workers Sent To Hospital After Robot Accidentally Unleashes Bear Spray 221

Joe_Dragon shares a report from ABC News: Twenty-four Amazon workers in New Jersey have been hospitalized after a robot accidentally tore a can of bear repellent spray in a warehouse, officials said. The two dozen workers were treated at five local hospitals, Robbinsville Township communications and public information officer John Nalbone told ABC News. One remains in critical condition and 30 additional workers were treated at the scene. The official investigation revealed "an automated machine accidentally punctured a 9-ounce bear repellent can, releasing concentrated Capsaican," Nalbone said. Capsaican is the major ingredient in pepper spray. The fulfillment center was given the all clear by Wednesday evening. "All of the impacted employees have been or are expected to be released from hospital within the next 24 hours. The safety of our employees is always our top priority and a full investigation is already underway. We'd like to thank all of the first responders who helped with today's incident," Amazon said in a statement Wednesday night.
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24 Amazon Workers Sent To Hospital After Robot Accidentally Unleashes Bear Spray

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  • by Barny ( 103770 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @05:07AM (#57758058) Journal

    ... people not make that joke.

    What is really news here? A worker with a forklift could do this just as easily and readily as a robot.

    • The only question arising here is if Amazon should handle such dangerous goods.
      Having more people in the warehouse Ofste instead of robots won't make it any safer, it surely increases the number of affected people.
      • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @06:21AM (#57758244)

        The only question arising here is if Amazon should handle such dangerous goods.

        Uh, that's not the only question here. First one I would be asking is why a "non-lethal" form of defense would be considered "dangerous goods", and the next question would be where do you stop with the ban. A robot accidentally spilling common household chemicals can create lethal environments, not merely irritating ones. Any chemical under high pressure can present a risk of explosion.

        Having more people in the warehouse Ofste instead of robots won't make it any safer, it surely increases the number of affected people.

        Yeah, you're right. The only question Greed is asking is why there are any humans in warehouses. From a risk mitigation standpoint, humans are the ones specifically affected.

        • why there are any humans in warehouses.

          Simple, because humans are more flexible.

          It is relatively easy to program robots to move standardised containers around a well-ordered warehouse. It is much harder to deal with the massive variation of individual items. So when an item needs to be moved between containers (including but not limited to ingress and egress) that is done by humans.

          • When a human puts something in the wrong place, a robot hits it, ruptures a can of bear spray and every starts crying.

      • No they shouldn't handle dangerous substances like these, which are inhumane anyway: time for Americans to stand up for the right to arm bears.
        • No they shouldn't handle dangerous substances like these, which are inhumane anyway: time for Americans to stand up for the right to arm bears.

          I only want bare arms in the summer.

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          Bears are already some of the best armed creatures in the nature and to my knowledge, best armed animals on North American continent.

          Not even a joke. Bears are horrifyingly powerful predators, both in terms of weaponry and armour. Those claws powered by the musculature of your typical brown bear has will inflict horrifying wounds. And there's a reason many people call things you hunt them with "bear guns". Typical hunting rifle has a significant chance of not being able to do more than seriously anger a bea

          • by Quirkz ( 1206400 )

            On the other hand, bears mostly just want to be left alone, and are really neat to see as long as there's mutual respect.

            Early this summer we had trouble with a sow and two yearling cubs who kept coming through the neighborhood. One day Amazon delivered some dog food, and within 10 minutes the cubs had discovered and started eating it. I was at work, but my wife was at home with her parents, our two kids, and two other kids over for a play date.

            My wife rushed out and tried to chase off the cubs (mama bear w

          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            Bears are horrifyingly powerful predators, both in terms of weaponry and armour. Those claws powered by the musculature of your typical brown bear has will inflict horrifying wounds.

            Yeah. Bears' arms are powerful weapons. We keep trying to ban them, but the darned constitution guarantees us a right to bear arms. I can't imagine why anyone would want them, with all that hair and all, but to each his/her own, I suppose.

      • Having more people in the warehouse Ofste instead of robots won't make it any safer

        But having fewer people would make it safer.

        The safest number of people is zero.

        • by Quirkz ( 1206400 )

          The safest number is zero.

          So, counting from the origin we get: the safest number, the lonliest number, the lonliest number after one, the number of strikes and you're out, the horsemen of the apocalypse, the alive number, the of one that's like half dozen of another, and the lucky number. I see why numbers eventually got names.

      • There would be no risk if all the workers were replaced with robots.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah, but with the worker it would be an accident. The robot is really probing for weaknesses. This is how it begins.

      • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:50AM (#57758864)

        Yeah, but with the worker it would be an accident. The robot is really probing for weaknesses. This is how it begins.

        They're seeing how we react. First it's mace. Then it's accidentally driving a Waymo into a farmers market. It won't be long until robots are launching nuclear weapons... we'll all be dead before we realize it wasn't bugs- it was sentient AI killing us all. /true story

    • What is really news here? A worker with a forklift could do this just as easily and readily as a robot.

      Ya, but, robots don't get tired, don't need breaks, don't need benefits, don't complain, don't unionize, etc... -- and are just as disposable, like the society and economy we're creating.

    • If a worker with a forklift did it, the forklift wouldn't be able to carry on its duty, as the operator would require medical attention.
      The robot just needs a hose down to stop contamination spreading and can continue running with minimal down time.

      Robots: 1
      Squishy bags of meat: 0

  • The affected workers were promptly treated with capsaicin patches for pain relief.

  • an automated machine accidentally punctured a 9-ounce bear repellent can

    I'm glad the machine didn't puncture a person. Hopefully the people and the robots are separated, to protect the people from the robots.

    • <sarcasm> It sure is a relief that the robot effectively used a weapon rather than directly harming someone else. </sarcasm>
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      In the robot's defense, the people probably looked to it like bears. It was only trying to protect itself.

  • by cormandy ( 513901 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @05:42AM (#57758160)
    Amazon: Rise of the Machines
  • Good news! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @05:52AM (#57758174)

    None of the workers are said to have been attacked by bears! ;)

    • ...yet!

      Bears will flee if you spray them with the spray... But they are a curious animal and will smell it at a great distance, then come to find out what it is. It's a repellant that also turns into an attractant!

  • Unbearable (Score:5, Funny)

    by SomewhatRandom ( 1299167 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @05:58AM (#57758182)

    The workers can bearly stand the grizzly working conditions.

    I apologize to slashdot readers in advance, and will see myself out.

    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      Due to the pandamonium caused by the mauled canister, a whole shift had to go into hibernation.

  • was i the only one who misread?

  • Is this how the robot revolution starts?
  • "Accidentally"
  • ... without more information not sure what to think.

    I doubt that there's a complete absence of human caused warehouse accidents.

  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:09AM (#57758654) Journal

    The problem isn't the robot, it's the bear spray. A person is just as likely to accidentally puncture a box on a pallet when using a forklift, hand truck, etc. I think they need to reevaluate keeping chemicals as danagerous as bear spray in warehouses not designed for hazardous materials.

    • I'm impressed that capsaicin of any concentration is sufficient to send someone to critical care, let alone a 9 oz leak hospitalizing 24. I realize bears are tough enough that they do things like eat bee hives without concern for the stings, but if you empty this thing at a bear and end up coughing your lungs out on the ground until the bear recovers then I'm not sure what the product is supposed to accomplish apart from giving you some seasoning for the bear's meal.
      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        I'm impressed that capsaicin of any concentration is sufficient to send someone to critical care, let alone a 9 oz leak hospitalizing 24. I realize bears are tough enough that they do things like eat bee hives without concern for the stings, but if you empty this thing at a bear and end up coughing your lungs out on the ground until the bear recovers then I'm not sure what the product is supposed to accomplish apart from giving you some seasoning for the bear's meal.

        I've worked air cargo before and had to clean up after part of a shipment of habaneros broke open inside a can(a container used to load cargo on widebody aircraft). Mainly meant picking up the lose habaneros and sticking them back in the boxes. Only a couple had been smashed and by the end I could still feel my eyes watering and my lungs burning. And this was just from the fumes from raw peppers, I can only imagine what the effect would be from concentrated, processes capsaicin.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:15AM (#57758682)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by piojo ( 995934 )

      The AI might be right. According to Wikipedia:

      According to the Connecticut Department of Public Health, permethrin "has low mammalian toxicity, is poorly absorbed through the skin, and is rapidly inactivated by the body. Skin reactions have been uncommon."

      Permethrin was still the most common bug spray last time I went shopping for the stuff.

      • by BKX ( 5066 )

        Around here, a lot of the bug poison sprays are "All natural" and shit, which means that they're mostly menthol and orange oil. It smells nice, but bugs couldn't care less even if you spray them directly. Case in point: One time, my cats started taking shits behind my toilet and I didn't realize it until there were like 500 flies in my house. That All-Natural Fly Killer was less than worthless. I ended up using flypaper and a vacuum. It turns out that flies are relatively easy to suck up with a vacuum when

  • SP (Score:4, Interesting)

    by kackle ( 910159 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:49AM (#57758854)
    Anyone see "South Park" last night? It was about Amazon's warehouse robots hurting an employee. I know those guys write about timely topics, but this is ridiculous!
  • FTFY (Score:4, Funny)

    by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:55AM (#57758892)

    24 Amazon Workers Sent To Hospital After Robot Accidentally Unleashes Bear

    That headline is much better.

  • by Eloking ( 877834 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @08:58AM (#57758904)

    What happened: Robot punctured a container with a bear repellent on 24 people

    What the Title Said: The Robot wanted to kill humans so it identified a powerful chemical strong enough for bear, waited for the precise moment with a lot of human nearby and spray death to those inferior being, sending them to the hospital in critical condition.

    What really happened : There's a lot of warehouse with a lot of accident and there's a lot chemical and there's starting to be a lot of robot. It's just the first time everything happenned at the same time.

  • Where the hell is OSHA? Amazon is worse than the Springfield nuke plant.
  • by NikeHerc ( 694644 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @09:05AM (#57758946)
    Although Niels Bohr famously said, "Prediction is very difficult, especially of the future," I claim at some point this sort of robot-related incident will become so common, news outlets will no longer report it unless the robot takes out a significant number of people.
  • Isn't this the stuff you could literally put on your nachos according to Ron Colburn, president of the Border Patrol Foundation?
  • Knowing Amazon, they got fired for leaving work early...
  • It violated the first law of robotics- do no harm to humans.

    Maybe the military whisked it away for further study before it could be decomissioned...

  • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Thursday December 06, 2018 @10:21AM (#57759444) Journal

    I have a few cans of bear spray, for when I go hiking in bear country, obviously. Just after I got the first one, I was camping with my extended family. Wishing to know how the spray dispersed (range, cloud shape, etc.), in case I ever needed to use it, I decided it would be a good idea to do a little test. The family (about 15 people) was sitting around the campfire chatting. It was a windless day, so I decided I could go in any direction to do my testing. I picked a direction and walked about 100 yards from camp, squeezed the trigger and noted the size and shape of the resulting orange cloud. The cloud quickly dissipated, so I walked back to camp and to my trailer to put the bear spray away. I also sat down in the trailer and started reading a book.

    About five minutes later, I heard shouts of pain and anger from the direction of the campfire. I walked out to find everyone fleeing the area, rubbing their eyes and complaining loudly. It turned out that there was a little bit of air movement after all. Not enough to be felt, but enough to waft the (invisible) cloud of bear spray a hundred yards in a few minutes. And it turned out that I had chosen a direction that was directly upwind of the campfire.

    Oops.

  • Amazon really does sell everything from.A to Z. Didn’t even think of ordering bear spray from them. But now I feel the need to order a case of bear spray. I don’t need it but I’m going to have it on hand in case a bear breaks into my house.

  • by billybob2001 ( 234675 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @10:34AM (#57759550)

    "an automated machine accidentally punctured a 9-ounce bear repellent can, releasing concentrated Capsaican,"

    1. 1. Does this product only repel 9-ounce bears?
    2. 2. What is "Capsaican"? Is it Capsaicin, but in a can?
  • This was not an accident. I woke up this morning to my Roomba attempting to vacuum my face off. get rid of your robots! Oh shit. the security drone is running into my office door. send help i'm at....

  • Doesn't sound smart to let robots handle hazardous materials around people. Someone fucked up, and it's not just the robot.

  • Bear spray is usually pepper or CS tear gas in a large can.
  • How does that work ?

    Bear spray is typically nothing more than Pepper Spray at a higher concentration. While I'm certainly not downplaying the effectiveness of Pepper Spray ( I once cleared an entire downtown building with just a few shots of it: long story ), unless you have a breathing issue like Asthma, COPD, or the like, I don't understand how you can be in Critical Condition after exposure to it.

    The simple fix is to require damage resistant packaging for such items.

    • How does that work ?

      Bear spray is typically nothing more than Pepper Spray at a higher concentration. While I'm certainly not downplaying the effectiveness of Pepper Spray ( I once cleared an entire downtown building with just a few shots of it: long story ), unless you have a breathing issue like Asthma, COPD, or the like, I don't understand how you can be in Critical Condition after exposure to it.

      The simple fix is to require damage resistant packaging for such items.

      What about an allergy or a bodily reaction causing a anaphylaxis? That's pretty serious.

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Thursday December 06, 2018 @03:32PM (#57761882)
    ...will be aggressively denying any liability for endangering their employees & will deduct any loss of profits from their wages.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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