FORT Robotics
FORT Robotics acquired Boston & Pittsburgh-based Mapless AI.
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FORT Robotics
FORT Robotics acquired Boston & Pittsburgh-based Mapless AI.
FORT Robotics, a developer of safe control technologies for robots and mobile machines, announced the acquisition of Mapless AI, a Boston- and Pittsburgh-based provider of vehicle teleoperation and autonomy supervision technologies.
FORT said that the acquisition represents a significant commercial expansion of its Trust Platform, adding two critical new capabilities: remote human-in-the-loop teleoperation and onboard active safety.
By integrating these technologies, FORT said it is expanding its market offering from safety-certified machine control to a comprehensive architecture for supervised autonomy.
"The Physical AI market is a multi-billion-dollar economic engine, but its full potential can only be unlocked if machines are trustworthy enough to operate in real-world human environments," said Samuel Reeves, CEO of FORT Robotics. "The robotics industry is at a critical crossroads where impressive demos are everywhere, but scalability remains rare. Acquiring Mapless AI expands our platform to directly meet this vital need, allowing FORT to deliver the proactive safety frameworks our customers are asking for. We are building the foundational trust system to ensure that as robots become more autonomous, safety is an accelerator rather than a bottleneck."
FOR said that the addition of Mapless AI's technology stack advances that foundation by introducing two major market offerings:
"We founded Mapless to build the core safety layer robots need to operate effectively in complex, real-world environments,” said Philipp Robbel, co-founder of Mapless AI. “The reality is that for robots to work closely with humans and valuable infrastructure, they must be smart enough to understand and anticipate risk. “Joining the FORT family allows us to bring our safety-first vision to a much larger platform, accelerating the type of products that will define the next decade of industrial automation and physical AI."
By merging these capabilities, FORT said that the acquisition transitions its platform into an intelligent, proactive system where autonomous machines can not only communicate safely but also actively read their environments, anticipate potential hazards and execute real-time operational decisions on the fly.
The company said that a single off-site operator can safely monitor and intervene across multiple vehicles from anywhere, completely decoupling human workers from high-risk environments while keeping meaningful oversight intact.
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