Why modern robot safety goes beyond copying human behavior
Robotics safety is often misunderstood as making robots behave more like humans. In reality, effective safety comes from intentional system design, clear risk awareness, and purpose-built safeguards — not imitation.
In a recent article, David Brandt from Universal Robots explains why safety should be viewed as a broader responsibility that considers tasks, environments, and human interaction as a whole.
Safety Depends on Context, Not Assumptions
No robot is automatically “safe” in every scenario.
True safety depends on:
✔ The task being performed
✔ The surrounding environment
✔ End-of-arm tooling
✔ How people interact with the system
That’s why risk assessments and safety standards remain critical — even with collaborative robots designed to work alongside people.

Read the Full Perspective From Universal Robots
This post highlights a few key ideas from David’s original article on robotics safety and design philosophy.
Read the full article by David at Universal Robots:
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Author Credit
This summary is based on an article written by David and published by Universal Robots. All original insights belong to the author and Universal Robots.