SafetyCommander: an AI safety officer where the model reasons and the code never decides
Article summary
Quick briefing — cleaned from the original RSS feed
Every factory floor already has cameras. The problem is that nobody is watching them. A safety officer can't be on every camera, on every shift, on every floor — so the footage gets recorded and reviewed after someone is already hurt. The obvious fix — "detect no hardhat → fire an alarm" — is worse than it sounds. It's hardcoded, it can't read your site's rules, and it drowns the ops team in false alarms until they mute it. What's actually missing is something that reasons about risk the way a…
1Key Takeaways
- Every factory floor already has cameras.
- The problem is that nobody is watching them.
- A safety officer can't be on every camera, on every shift, on every floor — so the footage gets recorded and reviewed after someone is already hurt.
- The obvious fix — "detect no hardhat → fire an alarm" — is worse than it sounds.
2AIWedia Score
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3Why it matters
Coding AI shifts how fast software ships and how much human review each change needs. DEV — ML reports that every factory floor already has cameras.
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