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In a lights-out factory scenario, if all human operators are removed from the floor, what unexpected failure modes emerge in fully automated systems that no one talks about during the sales pitch?

answer

That's a really insightful question! You're right that sales pitches often gloss over the hidden pitfalls of fully automated 'lights-out' factories. When all human operators are removed, several unexpected failure modes emerge that don't get enough attention:

1. The context gap - AI systems can't detect subtle anomalies that experienced operators spot instinctively, like unusual vibrations, smells, or sounds that signal impending failure. Sensors might miss these nuanced cues.

2. Cascading failures - Without human oversight, a small glitch in one system can trigger chain reactions across interconnected automated processes, with no one there to intervene early.

3. Missing data context - Automated systems collect data but often lack the operational context (like batch variations, ambient conditions, or recent maintenance) that humans naturally incorporate into decision-making.

4. Unpredictable edge cases - As Tesla discovered with their Model 3 'excessive automation' attempt, systems struggle with unpredictable scenarios or deeply human tasks that require improvisation.

5. Accountability vacuum - When something goes wrong in a fully automated system, there's often no clear point of human responsibility or intuitive problem-solving available.

The reality is that the most successful implementations balance automation with human oversight - using people for what they're uniquely good at (intuition, context, improvisation) while automating repetitive tasks. The 'lights-out' dream often overlooks how much value human operators bring beyond just executing procedures.

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