11 comments

  • rwmj 1 hour ago
    A friend who lives there sent me this photo of a bear roaming an Aomori building from a few days ago. https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/society/general-news/2026051... (https://archive.ph/Z6llc https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/attachment/327729/)
  • CamperBob2 1 minute ago
    It seems these really are just scarecrows, in that they are rooted to the spot. It's not a robot if it can't move.
  • swiftcoder 4 minutes ago
    Pretty sure I’m going to be seeing that robot wolf in my nightmares…
  • bombcar 1 hour ago
    I know how this ends; with robot bears fighting off robot wolves whilst we cower underground.
    • JumpCrisscross 17 minutes ago
      Are there any good robot animatronics for Halloween? I want a wendigo to walk around my yard.
      • beau_g 10 minutes ago
        We have something close, but unfortunately not at the halloween decoration price point - https://www.satyress.com/
      • bombcar 14 minutes ago
        Given the insane progression in the Home Depot Halloween displays I estimate it’s about two years off - twenty foot tall animatronic skeletons are now table stakes.
    • cyanydeez 10 minutes ago
      Cant we just invent robot elephants?
  • towledev 2 hours ago
    I wonder how the bears would write this headline
    • edaemon 1 hour ago
      "TIDE TURNS AGAINST HUMAN TERROR-BOTS"
  • hirvi74 8 minutes ago
    I wonder if Japan would need robot wolves had they not wrongfully drove their native wolf species to extinction?
    • storus 1 minute ago
      How would native wolves prevent bears from coming down to human settlements?
  • dudeinjapan 1 hour ago
    > The robot scarecrows are used to ward off bears in rural areas

    Two thoughts on this captioned image: (1) holy $&!# that is horrifying (2) if its designed to ward off bears, isn't it a scarebear?

  • water-drummer 1 hour ago
    Thought I was in r/nottheonion for a moment
    • lukan 19 minutes ago
      Title is click bait.

      It is a electronic scarecrow.

      Maybe one that moves soon, but even then still not something I would call a robot wolf.

  • readonkeyless 2 hours ago
    Interested to learn about the encroachment into bear territory. Disappointed this article didn't dig more into exactly why this is becoming an increasing problem. Since Japan's population is declining and most younger people moving into larger cities like Tokyo in search of jobs, my assumption would be that there would be less development in more rural areas, not more.
    • skybrian 1 hour ago
      > Scientists speculated that the uptick in attacks has been driven by a growing bear population, coupled with the year's bad acorn harvest, USA TODAY previously reported. These conditions created an area "overcrowded with hungry bears," driving the large animals to populated areas in search of food.

      https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2026/05/13/super-m...

    • hackernews682 1 hour ago
      Perhaps, because there are less people living in the rural areas, the bears are emboldened to roam more freely, thus increasing the frequency of encounters with the human occupiers.
      • mc32 1 hour ago
        But then it’s stated oddly. It’s more like bears are encroaching on human territory rather than people expanding into bear territory.
    • Barrin92 1 hour ago
      the fact that young people are moving has meant that money, attention and labor is missing, these days in rural sections of aging and developed countries the expertise and interest in forestry or wildlife management simply isn't there any more. I spent a few months in rural Japan a few years ago and it affected all kinds of jobs. Agriculture, pest control, or even much more mundane repair work. I knew a couple that moved there enticed by low property prices but they had to wait months to get the roof fixed.
      • AdrianB1 7 minutes ago
        People living in rural areas were capable of fixing most of their houses by themselves. When I grew up I spent most summers in a mountain village where people were self-resilient, I had all sorts of woodworking tools in the shed and other than electricity there was nothing my grandpa was not fixing himself and it was the same for all our neighbours.

        Now a couple moving from a city to a rural area needs to learn to do this work or not move to a village. The population decline in most places makes it clear that availability of services is only going to get worse.

      • bell-cot 12 minutes ago
        > had to wait months to get the roof fixed.

        In economic theory, that's an obvious business opportunity.

        In the real world.., might you know what barriers a small roofing repair business would face in rural Japan?

  • ShivamNayak11 56 minutes ago
    [dead]