Data Collection AI News & Updates
Genesis AI Unveils GENE-26.5 Foundation Model with Custom Robotic Hands and Data Collection Gloves
Genesis AI has revealed its first foundational robotics model, GENE-26.5, alongside custom-designed robotic hands that match human hand size and shape. The startup has developed a full-stack approach including sensor-loaded gloves for data collection from human workers, simulation systems for rapid iteration, and plans to release a full-body general-purpose robot soon. The company raised $105 million in seed funding and is expanding across Paris, California, and London with a team of 60 people.
Skynet Chance (+0.04%): The development of general-purpose robotic systems with human-like manipulation capabilities and autonomous task execution increases the potential attack surface and deployment scale of AI systems that could be misused or develop unintended behaviors. However, the current focus on specific tasks and human supervision mitigates immediate control concerns.
Skynet Date (-1 days): The full-stack approach combining hardware, software, and rapid data collection methods accelerates the deployment timeline for capable robotic systems in real-world environments. The simulation-based rapid iteration and novel data collection through worker gloves could speed up capability development.
AGI Progress (+0.04%): This represents significant progress toward AGI by bridging the embodiment gap through human-scale manipulation, multimodal learning from video and physical interaction data, and demonstrated ability to perform complex sequential tasks. The foundation model approach for robotics parallels the successful trajectory of language models.
AGI Date (-1 days): The combination of scalable data collection methods (gloves worn during normal work, internet videos), rapid simulation-based iteration, and full-stack control significantly accelerates the pace toward general-purpose physical intelligence. The startup's massive funding and aggressive hiring across three continents enables parallel development that could compress typical research timelines.
1X Announces In-Home Tests of Neo Gamma Humanoid Robots Starting in 2025
Norwegian robotics startup 1X plans to begin testing its humanoid robot, Neo Gamma, in several hundred to thousand homes by the end of 2025. These initial tests will rely heavily on teleoperators—humans remotely controlling the robots—to gather data that will help train AI models for future autonomous capabilities.
Skynet Chance (+0.01%): While the development of humanoid robots represents a step toward embodied AI, Neo Gamma's heavy reliance on human teleoperators indicates we're still far from autonomous robots capable of independent physical action that could pose uncontrolled risks.
Skynet Date (+0 days): The early-stage nature of these humanoid robots, with their dependence on remote human operators and limited autonomous capabilities, doesn't significantly alter the timeline for potential AI risk scenarios; this represents an expected intermediate stage in robotics development.
AGI Progress (+0.01%): The introduction of bipedal robots into home environments, even with limited autonomy, establishes a platform for collecting real-world interaction data crucial for developing embodied AI systems that can physically operate in human spaces, a key component of general intelligence.
AGI Date (+0 days): The aggressive timeline for in-home testing (by end of 2025) slightly accelerates progress toward embodied AI by creating pathways for data collection in diverse home environments, though the heavy reliance on human teleoperators limits the immediate impact.