A West Hollywood -Manman with Cerebral Parese conquered the moment that a robot of food delivery repeatedly collided with his mobility scooter on 12 September (credit: @‌the.gay.disabled.therapist via StoryFul)
A Californian man with cerebral palsy conquered the moment that a robot of food delivery repeatedly clashed with his mobility scooter in a video that has since become viral.
Mark Chaney, a therapist in West Hollywood, said he was on his way home to a procedure on Friday 12 September, when he came across a delivery robot he described as “irregular action,” he told the news agency Storyfulul.
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“Son of a B —-,” says Chaney in the video as he tries to pass the robot frustrating before the two collide. “Oh my God. Seriously?”
A Californian man with cerebral palsy conquered the moment that a robot of food delivery repeatedly clashed with his mobility scooter in a video that has since become viral. (@‌The.gay.disabled.therapist via storyful / storyful)
Chaney had driven on his mobility scooter because of his cerebral palsy, he said.
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“The robot continued to block me to pass by and when I finally passed, it cut me off and then stopped, causing my scooter to hit the back of the ‘bone, and then he pulled me back,” Chaney told Storyful.

Mark Chaney, a therapist in West Hollywood, said he was on his way home of a procedure on Friday 12 September, when he met a delivery robot he described as ‘irregular action’. (@‌The.gay.disabled.therapist via storyful / storyful)
He later said he had been in contact with Serve Robotics, the company that owns the robot of food delivery.
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“I hope this can be resolved with recovery and change for me and others,” said Chaney in the commentary part of an update posted on his Instagram. “This can be a safety problem for people with mobility aids, a handicap or even someone walking on the street.”

File photo: A serve robotic delivery robot is shown here. Chaney later said he had been in contact with Serve Robotics, the company that owns the food delivery robot. (Serve robotics)
Serve Robotics, located from California, previously announced that it had a goal to use 2,000 AI-driven delivery robots in the US by the end of 2025.
Earlier this year, Uber announced in the same way that it expanded its use of robots to deliver food, whereby customers on the east coast taste the technology for the first time.
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