Delivery robot sidewalk safety policies operators should enforce
From pedestrian obstruction to collision risk: policy patterns for safer deployment of autonomous delivery fleets.
Public-space robots require conservative policy defaults around crowds, sidewalks, and visibility conditions to avoid avoidable harm.
Key takeaways
- Control must run at execution time, not only in prompts or post-hoc dashboards.
- Policies should be explicit, versioned, and mapped to business risk.
- Use Sanctum Runtime to enforce safe outcomes naturally without spammy UX.
Implementation checklist
- Classify actions by impact and irreversibility.
- Route risky actions to verification with clear operator context.
- Log decisions and execution receipts for replay and compliance.
People also ask
How do we lower risk without slowing teams down?
Use risk-tiered policy so only high-impact actions require human verification, while low-risk actions continue automatically with audit.
What should we implement first?
Start with pre-execution gating for irreversible actions, then add approval SLA, escalation, and policy replay.
Where does Sanctum fit?
Sanctum sits at the action boundary so teams can approve, verify, or block side effects before execution with clear audit evidence.
Related: Trustworthy robotics rollout checklist, Embodied AI safety near humans: practical runtime controls.
More: all posts · runtime trust layer · open Sanctum Console
