Amazon is experimenting with humanoid robots for warehouse work.

    • Conceivably, to increase the performance of the humans WITHOUT making them lose their jobs.

      These warehouses all act like they’re perpetually short-staffed and under intense demand. If they boost overall performance, one reasonable outcome would be easier working conditions for the same workers, or shifting workers from jobs robots can do to other areas that were short-staffed.

      It won’t be because fuck the workers. But that possibility should exist.

      •  t3rmit3   ( @t3rmit3@beehaw.org ) 
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        8 months ago

        This has never been how automation has worked. Automation all the way back to the first factories displacing handmade goods has used automation to increase total output, not to reduce time spent for the same output, and then allowing everyone to work less. It actually increased the workday for most of those jobs, because the automation so drastically reduced the per-item price that it drove down wages in turn.

        Amazon wants employees who won’t unionize, who don’t take breaks, and who cost far less, and since they can’t outsource a local distribution warehouse, they’ll use robots instead of exploited foreign workers.

      • I mean let’s be honest from the minute 0 Amazon has wanted to automate all the warehouse… Like the people were meant as transitory thing or for the parts were there wasn’t any alternative at all.