FORT Robotics acquired Mapless AI on May 27, 2026; terms were not disclosed. Mapless AI, based in the Boston and Pittsburgh areas, builds long-distance vehicle teleoperation and onboard active-safety systems, letting a remote human supervise or take over an autonomous machine.

FORT positions itself as the safety-and-control 'trust layer' for physical AI, and reports 27 patents, more than 19,000 units deployed and over 600 customers across agriculture, construction, warehousing and defense. The deal folds remote supervision and active safety into that platform.

As robots and autonomous machines scale, the bottleneck shifts from capability to trust — who is accountable when a machine errs, and how a human intervenes in time. Consolidation at the safety and teleoperation layer is a sign the industry is maturing past demos toward deployable, certifiable systems.

Key Facts

  • FORT Robotics acquired Mapless AI on May 27, 2026 (terms undisclosed)
  • Mapless AI: long-distance teleoperation plus onboard active safety
  • FORT reports 27 patents, 19,000+ units deployed, 600+ customers
  • Sectors: agriculture, construction, warehousing, defense
  • Extends FORT's safety 'trust layer' into remote supervision

Frequently Asked

What did FORT Robotics acquire?

FORT Robotics acquired Mapless AI, a vehicle-teleoperation and active-safety specialist, on May 27, 2026. Financial terms were not disclosed.

What does Mapless AI do?

It builds long-distance teleoperation and onboard active-safety systems that let a remote human supervise or take over an autonomous machine.

Why does the deal matter?

As autonomous machines scale, safety and human oversight become the bottleneck; consolidation at the teleoperation and safety layer signals the industry maturing toward deployable, certifiable systems.