Let’s face it: walking in America is basically an extreme sport. Not the cool kind either — more like ‘I didn’t want to die on my way to the grocery store’ level of adrenaline. Crosswalks? More like cross-your-fingers walks.
Enter Obvio — a startup from San Carlos, California, that seems alarmingly optimistic given the flaming hellscape that is pedestrian safety in this country. Their big idea? Put cameras on stop signs. Yes, those red octagons that half the population believes are just strong suggestions.
Now before you start shouting ‘1984!’ and duct taping your webcam, Obvio swears this isn’t some Orwellian fever dream. According to the founders, their goal isn’t to creepily monitor your every move while you eat a burrito on the corner — it’s to help make intersections not resemble a Mad Max sequel.
The concept is simple: cameras watch how drivers behave at stop signs — or more accurately, how they completely ignore them — and collect data to figure out how to make things safer for us measly humans not protected by two tons of steel. No automated tickets, no facial recognition… just good old-fashioned surveillance with a dash of good intentions.
Look, fixing pedestrian safety with tech is like trying to clean a landfill with a Roomba — but at least someone’s doing *something*. So while Obvio isn’t saving the world, they might just make it slightly less lethal to cross the street. Baby steps, people.