We collect cookies to analyze our website traffic and performance; we never collect any personal data. Cookie Policy
Accept
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Competing for Streets and Sidewalks
Share
Font ResizerAa
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Follow US
NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Technology > Competing for Streets and Sidewalks
Competing for Streets and Sidewalks
Technology

Competing for Streets and Sidewalks

Last updated: March 24, 2022 4:49 pm
Editorial Board Published March 24, 2022
Share
SHARE
24OnTech robots NL facebookJumbo

Almost as soon as technologists invented robots to haul groceries or burritos to people’s doors, the arguments over sidewalks started.

Officials in San Francisco, which is a testing lab for many new technologies, worried that interactions with the robots could hurt older people, children or those with disabilities. About a year ago, Pennsylvania headed off city-by-city restrictions and gave sidewalk-roaming delivery robots, which look like beer coolers on wheels, the same rights as pedestrians. Officials in Kirkland, Wash., recently put on hold permits for Amazon’s experimental package delivery robots and are asking whether the company should pay fees for using sidewalk space.

It might seem ridiculous to devote brain space and government attention to robot couriers, which may never be feasible outside of limited settings like college campuses or city centers. And go ahead and roll your eyes at left-leaning cities like San Francisco that seem to be obsessed with rules.

But these robot battles are a microcosm of big questions about technology and modern life. How do we share public space like streets and sidewalks — and who is responsible for the inevitable harms that result from changing our communities, including threats to safety, wear and tear of roads and sidewalks, congestion and pollution?

Versions of these questions emerged when e-commerce deliveries boomed, and they appear whenever locales carve out room for outdoor dining, cycling, ride services such as Uber, walking, buses, driverless cars, electric scooters or flying taxis. These are all flavors of the same dispute over who belongs and who doesn’t in our shared spaces, and who deserves more or less of a limited resource.

“For 100 years, we’ve had all kinds of things on our roads, streets and sidewalks that we don’t quite know what to do with,” said Bryant Walker Smith, a professor at the University of South Carolina law school who studies emerging transportation. There was a time, he pointed out, when cars were the new and contentious interlopers on the roads.

Smith acknowledged that there was no simple answer to who and what belong on our streets and sidewalks.

Not allowing public space to evolve is self-defeating. We might miss out on useful changes to our hometowns or better ways of moving people and goods around. But it’s also potentially destructive to allow a free-for-all, like delivery trucks that navigate neighborhoods, golf carts on freeways, or seas of cars and scooters clogging every road.

Smith said it was appropriate for different communities to make their own choices about sidewalk robots, cycling lanes or ride services, even if it can be ungainly to have no one-size-fits-all blueprint for how to handle these things. He said that universities, which so far have been the hotbed of robot couriers, had the authority to set rules like speed and weight limits and hold the courier companies to their promises.

Officials and all of us need to ask what we want for our communities, he said, then imagine how we want public space to serve those goals. That means thinking comprehensively about uses of roads and sidewalks, not treating robot couriers, electric scooters, private cars or UPS trucks as discrete modes of transportation.

Most of all, Smith said, people and policymakers should not only contemplate what to do about new forms of transportation, but also be willing to reimagine the status quo of cars and trucks as the dominant users of public space, with everything and everyone else competing for the margins of streets and sidewalks.

Because of the high costs vehicles impose on communities, like traffic congestion, road deaths, climate change and demands on physical space, Smith said that we might need to be more imaginative about making room for everything other than cars. “Let’s encourage the diversity and see what happens,” he said.

This is going to be messy and contentious, but as Smith said, that is how change works.

For more reading on emerging transportation: (A subscription may be required for these.)


Before we go …

  • Israel’s government denied requests from Ukraine and Estonia in recent years to use a contentious digital spying technology called Pegasus to hack Russian phones. My colleagues Ronen Bergman and Mark Mazzetti report that Israel was worried about damaging its relationship with the Kremlin.

    For more on Pegasus, read this investigation from January.

  • He’s an English teenager: Cybersecurity researchers believe that they’ve identified a 16-year-old who they say spearheaded a string of computer attacks against tech companies including Microsoft and the computer chip company Nvidia, Bloomberg News reported. (A subscription may be required.)

  • A moment of peace in a war over apps: People using Spotify’s Android app will soon have side-by-side options to pay for a music subscription through either Google’s payment system or Spotify’s. My colleague Dai Wakabayashi explains why this tweak is an intriguing moment in global quests to wrest control of apps from Google and Apple.

Hugs to this

I loved reading this Twitter thread of animal researchers discussing a fox, frog, tarantula and other research subjects who barely budged from the same spot when their movements were tracked.

You Might Also Like

Claude Cowork turns Claude from a chat software into shared AI infrastructure

How OpenAI is scaling the PostgreSQL database to 800 million customers

Researchers broke each AI protection they examined. Listed below are 7 inquiries to ask distributors.

MemRL outperforms RAG on complicated agent benchmarks with out fine-tuning

All the pieces in voice AI simply modified: how enterprise AI builders can profit

TAGGED:Delivery Servicesinternal-sub-only-nlRobots and RoboticsSidewalksThe Washington Mail
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Popular News
Laura Harrier wears couture denim look by Hole at Met Gala in NYC
Fashion

Laura Harrier wears couture denim look by Hole at Met Gala in NYC

Editorial Board May 6, 2025
Mini-organ fashions reveal hantavirus secrets and techniques, level to therapies
Genies unveils user-generated content material instruments that allow anybody create customized AI avatars
Kamala Harris returns to ‘The View’ to handle notorious 2024 marketing campaign query
NYPD chief pressured nightspots to donate to his turkey giveaway: lawsuit

You Might Also Like

Salesforce Analysis: Throughout the C-suite, belief is the important thing to scaling agentic AI
Technology

Salesforce Analysis: Throughout the C-suite, belief is the important thing to scaling agentic AI

January 22, 2026
Railway secures 0 million to problem AWS with AI-native cloud infrastructure
Technology

Railway secures $100 million to problem AWS with AI-native cloud infrastructure

January 22, 2026
Why LinkedIn says prompting was a non-starter — and small fashions was the breakthrough
Technology

Why LinkedIn says prompting was a non-starter — and small fashions was the breakthrough

January 22, 2026
ServiceNow positions itself because the management layer for enterprise AI execution
Technology

ServiceNow positions itself because the management layer for enterprise AI execution

January 21, 2026

Categories

  • Health
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Art
  • World

About US

New York Dawn is a proud and integral publication of the Enspirers News Group, embodying the values of journalistic integrity and excellence.
Company
  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • Accessibility Statement
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability
Term of Use
  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices
© 2024 New York Dawn. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?