
Photo by Gabriele Malaspina on Unsplash
China Hosts The World’s First Humanoid Robot Games
- Written by Andrea Miliani Former Tech News Expert
- Fact-Checked by Sarah Frazier Former Content Manager
China began hosting its highly anticipated three-day World Humanoid Robot Games this Friday, showcasing advances in robotics and AI across multiple fields. The competition features 280 teams from 16 countries and over 500 robots.
In a rush? Here are the quick facts:
- China is hosting the world’s first World Humanoid Robot Games.
- 280 teams from 16 countries are participating in the three-day event.
- The event includes 26 competitions in areas such as boxing, soccer, table tennis, cleaning, and medicine sorting.
According to Deutsche Welle , the event includes 26 competitions in areas such as boxing, soccer, table tennis, cleaning, and medicine sorting.
China has previously organized several events to promote the competition. In April, the world’s first mixed half-marathon was held in Beijing, in which robots and humans ran together for the first time in a 21.1-kilometer course. The next month, the world’s first robot kickboxing competition took place in Hangzhou, and in June, Beijing hosted the first RoBoLeague 3‑on‑3 humanoid robot soccer tournament.
Beyond the competitive environment, China’s World Humanoid Robot Games also serve as a platform to showcase the advances and potential in AI achieved by both China and other participating countries, such as the United States, Brazil, and Germany.
According to Reuters , 192 participants at the “robot olympics” represented universities, and 88 private companies, such as China’s Fourier Intelligence and Unitree.
Multiple robots collapsed and failed in the first competitions. Four robots crashed into each other in the soccer match, and one robot collapsed in the 1500-metre running event. Organizers explained that all data collation was valuable for optimizing and improving robot development.
China keeps investing billions in robotics and AI development, competing against other nations with advanced technologies, such as the United States.

Image by Freepik
Teen Arrested After AI School Surveillance Misinterprets Online Joke
- Written by Kiara Fabbri Former Tech News Writer
- Fact-Checked by Sarah Frazier Former Content Manager
A Tennessee 13-year-old girl was arrested after an AI school system misread her online joke, raising concerns about student surveillance.
In a rush? Here are the quick facts:
- School software Gaggle flagged her message, triggering law enforcement involvement.
- The girl faced strip-search, jail time, house arrest, and alternative schooling.
- AI surveillance monitors private student chats, often misinterpreting context.
Lesley Mathis, the girl’s mother, said the teen’s comment was “wrong” but not a real threat. “It made me feel like, is this the America we live in? And it was this stupid, stupid technology that is just going through picking up random words and not looking at context,” Mathis said as reported by Fortune , which first detailed the story.
Earlier that day, her friends had teased her about her tan and called her “Mexican,” even though she isn’t. When asked about her plans for Thursday, she replied, “on Thursday we kill all the Mexico’s” in a school chat monitored by software called Gaggle.
By morning, she was interrogated, strip-searched, and held in jail overnight. A court ordered eight weeks of house arrest, a psychological evaluation, and twenty days at an alternative school.
Schools across the U.S. now use AI technology to monitor student communications for signs of violence or self-harm. Systems like Gaggle and Lightspeed Alert operate in thousands of districts, alerting school staff and law enforcement. However, AI-powered school surveillance tools pose significant risks despite their promise of safety.
The AP notes how sensitive student information can be inadvertently exposed, as seen when thousands of unprotected documents were accessible online. Such tools may generate false alarms, misidentify threats, or out LGBTQ+ students, eroding trust between students, families, and educators.
The AP adds that over-surveillance can induce stress and limit healthy self-expression, while unclear long-term benefits and reliance on inadequate mental health resources raise ethical and developmental concerns.
An analysis of Gaggle alerts in Kansas, reported in another issue by the AP , found almost two-thirds of incidents were false alarms, triggered by homework or deleted photos.
Students have also been flagged for editing essays or posting jokes on private platforms, demonstrating how AI surveillance can criminalize ordinary teenage behavior.
“It has routinized law enforcement access and presence in students’ lives, including in their home,” said Elizabeth Laird, a director at the Center for Democracy and Technology, as reported by Fortune.
Jeff Patterson, Gaggle’s CEO, said the Tennessee school misused the software. “I wish that was treated as a teachable moment, not a law enforcement moment,” he said.
Students often do not realize private messages are being monitored. “If an adult makes a super racist joke that’s threatening on their computer, they can delete it, and they wouldn’t be arrested,” said Alexa Manganiotis, 16, a student in Florida.
Critics warn AI surveillance can traumatize children. Sam Boyd of the Southern Poverty Law Center said involuntary mental health evaluations often feel “traumatic and damaging,” as reported by Fortune.
Indeed, the AP notes that the speed and reach of AI monitoring can be startling. A Snapchat joke about school shootings in Florida triggered both FBI involvement and an immediate arrest, while Lightspeed alerts detected deleted messages, resulting in rapid school interventions.
The Gaggle alert system in Polk County generated hundreds of alerts over four years, leading to involuntary mental health evaluations that students later described to the AP as traumatic experiences.
In Polk County alone, hundreds of Gaggle alerts over four years triggered involuntary mental health evaluations, some of which students described as traumatic.
Two years later, Mathis said her daughter is improving but remains “terrified” of running into the officers who arrested her. “It’s like we just want kids to be these little soldiers, and they’re not,” she said. “They’re just humans.”