# The Rise of 'Clanker Attacks': Documenting the War on Robots > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/the-rise-of-clanker-attacks-documenting-the-war-on-robots) > Author: Daniel > Date: 2026-04-01 The future arrived on city streets with a whir of electric motors and the promise of seamless automation. But instead of being welcomed, America's growing fleet of autonomous delivery robots and self-driving cars has found itself under siege. From Philadelphia to San Francisco, a pattern of escalating violence against AI-powered machines has emerged—what social media has dubbed "clanker attacks." The phenomenon gained widespread attention through a recent [Polymarket tweet](https://x.com/Polymarket/status/2039349667624812972) reporting that "Food delivery robots in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, & Chicago facing rise in violent attacks from 'anti-clanker' activists." The term "clanker," originally sci-fi slang for mechanical beings, has been adopted by both supporters and detractors of robotic automation as they clash over the future of urban mobility. What began as isolated incidents of vandalism has evolved into a coordinated resistance movement, with documented attacks spanning multiple cities and countries. This investigation reveals the scope, motivations, and consequences of the emerging war between humans and machines on our streets. ```timeline {"events":[{"id":"cone_rebellion_start","label":"Safe Street Rebels Begin Cone Attacks","date":"2023-07-01","category":"Activist Tactics","description":"Safe Street Rebels pioneer traffic cone tactic against Cruise robotaxis in San Francisco, exploiting safety programming to disable vehicles","metadata":{"Location":"San Francisco, CA","Target":"Cruise robotaxis","Method":"Traffic cones on sensors"},"importance":7},{"id":"chinatown_fire","label":"Waymo Robotaxi Destroyed by Fire","date":"2024-02-10","category":"Vehicle Destruction","description":"Waymo robotaxi attacked and set ablaze with fireworks in San Francisco's Chinatown during Lunar New Year celebrations","metadata":{"Location":"Chinatown, San Francisco","Damage":"Total vehicle loss","Method":"Windows smashed, graffiti, fireworks"},"importance":10},{"id":"piterman_attack","label":"Tesla Strikes Waymo Vehicle","date":"2024-03-19","category":"Vehicle Assault","description":"Konstantine Nikka-Sher Piterman deliberately strikes Waymo vehicle with Tesla in Oakland","metadata":{"Location":"Oakland, CA","Perpetrator":"Konstantine Nikka-Sher Piterman","Method":"Vehicle ramming"},"importance":8},{"id":"tire_slashing","label":"Mass Tire Slashing Campaign","date":"2024-07-01","category":"Property Damage","description":"Ronaile Burton accused of slashing 19 Waymo vehicle tires, causing $22,000 in damage","metadata":{"Location":"San Francisco, CA","Perpetrator":"Ronaile Burton","Damage":"$22,000"},"importance":7},{"id":"tesla_takedown","label":"Global Tesla Takedown Protests","date":"2025-03-29","category":"Organized Protest","description":"Coordinated global protests targeting Tesla's Full Self-Driving technology across multiple cities","metadata":{"Scope":"Global","Target":"Tesla FSD","Organization":"Tesla Takedown movement"},"importance":8},{"id":"ice_protests","label":"Waymos Burned During ICE Protests","date":"2025-06-15","category":"Political Protest","description":"Burning Waymo vehicles become symbols of resistance during ICE raids in Los Angeles","metadata":{"Location":"Los Angeles, CA","Context":"ICE raids protest","Symbolism":"Anti-government resistance"},"importance":9},{"id":"quinn_charges_start","label":"Quinn Vandalism Spree Begins","date":"2025-07-01","category":"Serial Vandalism","description":"Walker Reed Quinn begins systematic vandalism campaign against Waymo vehicles in SoMa neighborhood","metadata":{"Location":"SoMa, San Francisco","Perpetrator":"Walker Reed Quinn, 45","Pattern":"Repeat offenses"},"importance":8},{"id":"berlin_infrastructure","label":"Energy Infrastructure Attack","date":"2026-01-03","category":"Infrastructure Sabotage","description":"Anarchist group Vulkangruppe attacks energy infrastructure in Berlin, citing AI's energy demands","metadata":{"Location":"Berlin, Germany","Perpetrator":"Vulkangruppe","Target":"Power infrastructure"},"importance":9},{"id":"la_robot_rampage","label":"LA Robot Property Damage","date":"2026-02-15","category":"Property Damage","description":"Food delivery robot wreaks havoc in LA yard, smashing fence and stealing debris","metadata":{"Location":"Los Angeles, CA","Damage":"Fence destruction","Behavior":"Possible hijacking"},"importance":6},{"id":"quinn_charges_filed","label":"Quinn Formally Charged","date":"2026-02-08","category":"Legal Action","description":"San Francisco DA files formal charges against Walker Reed Quinn for multiple Waymo vandalism incidents","metadata":{"Location":"San Francisco, CA","Legal Status":"Formal charges","Timespan":"July 2025 - Feb 2026"},"importance":7},{"id":"london_protests","label":"Largest AI Safety Protest","date":"2026-02-28","category":"Organized Protest","description":"200-person demonstration at London's King's Cross tech hub by Pause AI and Pull the Plug groups","metadata":{"Location":"King's Cross, London","Attendance":"200 people","Organizations":"Pause AI, Pull the Plug"},"importance":8},{"id":"philly_vandalism","label":"Philadelphia Robot Harassment","date":"2026-03-14","category":"Public Harassment","description":"Uber Eats delivery robot sat on and graffitied by pedestrians, captured by photographer Hugh Dillon","metadata":{"Location":"Center City, Philadelphia","Photographer":"Hugh Dillon","Method":"Sitting, graffiti"},"importance":7},{"id":"sf_ai_march","label":"San Francisco AI Corridor March","date":"2026-03-21","category":"Organized Protest","description":"Anti-AI activists march through San Francisco from Anthropic to OpenAI to xAI offices","metadata":{"Location":"SoMa, San Francisco","Route":"Anthropic → OpenAI → xAI","Demands":"Pause AI development"},"importance":8},{"id":"chicago_shelter_1","label":"First Chicago Bus Shelter Crash","date":"2026-03-24","category":"Property Damage","description":"Delivery robot smashes through bus shelter glass in West Town, video goes viral with 3.6M views","metadata":{"Location":"West Town, Chicago","Viral Views":"3.6 million on X","Media":"NBC Chicago, CBS Chicago"},"importance":8},{"id":"chicago_shelter_2","label":"Second Chicago Bus Shelter Crash","date":"2026-03-25","category":"Property Damage","description":"Second delivery robot crashes into Old Town bus shelter within one week of first incident","metadata":{"Location":"Old Town, Chicago","Pattern":"Second incident in week","Media":"Chicago Sun-Times"},"importance":7},{"id":"sheffield_vandalism","label":"Sheffield Robot Vandalism","date":"2026-03-31","category":"International Incident","description":"Starship Technologies delivery robots spray-painted and damaged in Sheffield, UK","metadata":{"Location":"Meersbrook, Sheffield, UK","Target":"Starship Technologies robots","Method":"Spray paint, bent poles"},"importance":6}],"title":"Timeline of 'Clanker Attacks': Robot and AI Vandalism Incidents","description":"A comprehensive timeline documenting the escalating pattern of attacks against autonomous vehicles and delivery robots across multiple cities and countries"} ``` ## The Food Delivery Robot Battleground The most visible front in this conflict involves the small, wheeled delivery robots that have proliferated across American cities. These six-wheeled automatons, operated by companies like Serve Robotics and Starship Technologies for platforms including Uber Eats, have become lightning rods for anti-AI sentiment. ### Philadelphia: Ground Zero for Robot Harassment Philadelphia emerged as a particularly hostile environment for delivery robots in March 2026. Video footage captured by street photographer Hugh Dillon on March 14 showed an Uber Eats delivery robot continuing its route despite being sat on by a pedestrian and covered in graffiti. The incident, which went viral across social media platforms, exemplified the robots' programmed persistence in the face of human interference. "A delivery robot used for Uber Eats appears unfazed after being sat on and graffitied in footage filmed on a Philadelphia street," [reported USA Today](https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2026/03/20/delivery-robot-vandalized-philadelphia-video/89250329007/) (March 20, 2026), highlighting the surreal nature of machines continuing their missions while under assault. The Philadelphia incidents marked a turning point where casual harassment of robots became normalized street behavior. Philadelphia robot vandalism*An Uber Eats delivery robot continues operating despite vandalism in Philadelphia. Photo: USA Today* ### Chicago: When Robots Fight Back Chicago witnessed some of the most dramatic escalations in robot-human conflict. In March 2026, delivery robots caused property damage when they smashed through two city bus shelters within a single week. The incidents were extensively documented by local media outlets. "Food delivery robots have shattered two city bus shelters within the last week, fueling heated discussion amongst Chicago humans who say they shouldn't have to share the public way with the apparently freewheeling automatons," [reported Block Club Chicago](https://blockclubchicago.org/2026/03/25/robots-gone-wild-food-delivery-robots-smash-2-bus-shelters-in-chicago/) (March 25, 2026). The [Chicago Sun-Times documented](https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/2026/03/25/delivery-robot-smashes-into-old-town-bus-shelter-in-second-crash-of-the-week) the second incident in Old Town, while [NBC Chicago reported](https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/delivery-robot-goes-viral-after-shattering-west-town-bus-shelter-glass/3913225/) that video of the West Town crash went viral with 3.6 million views on X. The Chicago incidents represented a new category of "clanker attack"—one where the robots appeared to strike first, though technical investigations suggested sensor malfunctions rather than deliberate aggression. ## Waymo Wars: San Francisco's Autonomous Vehicle Battleground While delivery robots bore the brunt of street-level harassment, San Francisco's fleet of Waymo robotaxis faced far more serious and coordinated attacks. The autonomous vehicles, with their distinctive sensor arrays and "WAYMO" branding, became symbols of Silicon Valley's technological overreach in the eyes of frustrated residents. ### The Chinatown Inferno The most shocking incident occurred on February 10, 2024, when a Waymo robotaxi was completely destroyed by fire in San Francisco's Chinatown. According to [detailed reports from Fifth Level Consulting](https://fifthlevelconsulting.com/autonomous-vehicle-vandalism/), the vehicle was surrounded by a crowd at exactly 9 PM while navigating Jackson Street. Attackers smashed the windows, covered the car in graffiti, and threw a lit firework inside, engulfing the vehicle in flames. "Firefighters responded to the scene as the vehicle was engulfed in flames. A nearby restaurant worker called the police upon witnessing the fire," the report noted. Fortunately, no passengers were inside during the attack, but the incident marked a significant escalation from vandalism to outright destruction. Waymo fire in Chinatown*San Francisco Fire Department extinguishes a Waymo robotaxi set ablaze in Chinatown. Photo: Clara Jeffery via SF Standard* ### The Serial Vandal and Corporate Response San Francisco prosecutors charged 45-year-old Walker Reed Quinn with multiple Waymo vandalism incidents spanning from July 2025 through February 2026. Quinn's alleged attacks in the SoMa neighborhood represented a pattern of repeat offenses that demonstrated the persistent nature of anti-robot sentiment. The charges came as Waymo co-CEO Dmitri Dolgov publicly stated the company was "not standing for" the vandalism, signaling a shift toward aggressive prosecution. "We're investing heavily in detection systems and working closely with law enforcement to identify and prosecute attackers," Dolgov said in October 2025, marking a departure from the industry's previous tolerance of vandalism as a cost of doing business. ### The Cone Rebellion and Systematic Disruption The "Safe Street Rebels" pioneered perhaps the most effective form of robot disruption starting in July 2023. Their tactic of placing traffic cones on Cruise robotaxis to disable sensors became viral, inspiring copycat actions citywide. The method exploited the vehicles' conservative safety programming—robots would shut down rather than risk operating with compromised sensors. [According to Fifth Level Consulting's comprehensive analysis](https://fifthlevelconsulting.com/autonomous-vehicle-vandalism/), documented cases include Ronaile Burton, who slashed 19 Waymo vehicle tires causing $22,000 in damage, and Konstantine Nikka-Sher Piterman, who deliberately struck a Waymo vehicle with his Tesla on March 19, 2024. During ICE raids in Los Angeles in June 2025, burning Waymo vehicles became symbols of resistance, demonstrating how anti-AI sentiment had merged with broader political grievances. ## International Incidents: A Global Pattern The anti-robot movement has spread beyond American borders, with documented incidents across Europe and the UK revealing that hostility toward automation transcends national boundaries. In Sheffield, UK, Starship Technologies' delivery robots faced systematic vandalism in March 2026, with attackers spray-painting machines and bending identification poles. Meanwhile, Berlin witnessed sophisticated infrastructure attacks in January 2026, when anarchist group Vulkangruppe targeted energy systems, explicitly citing AI's massive power consumption as justification. ## The Activist Underground: Motivations and Tactics Behind the scattered incidents lies a growing network of organized resistance groups driven by economic fears and ideological opposition to automation. **Economic displacement** represents the primary driver. The AFL-CIO estimates approximately 300,000 driving jobs are at risk by 2030 due to autonomous vehicle deployment, galvanizing labor unions and individual drivers to view robots as existential threats. **Organized resistance groups** have emerged with distinct approaches: - **Safe Street Rebels** pioneered non-violent but effective cone attacks against Cruise vehicles - **Pause AI and Pull the Plug** organized major demonstrations, including 200-person protests at London's King's Cross tech hub (February 28, 2026) and marches through San Francisco's AI corridor (March 21, 2026) - **Tesla Takedown** coordinated global protests on March 29, 2025, specifically targeting Tesla's Full Self-Driving technology These groups demand pausing frontier AI development and establishing global treaties to halt AI advancement, viewing current deployment as reckless experimentation on public streets. ## Corporate Countermeasures and Industry Response Faced with escalating attacks, robotics companies have developed sophisticated countermeasures while pursuing aggressive legal strategies. **Detection and response systems** now include threat identification technology, automatic law enforcement alerts, enhanced cameras, and GPS tracking for real-time monitoring. Companies have shifted from absorbing vandalism costs to aggressive prosecution, with Waymo's public stance of "not standing for it" signaling industry-wide hardening. **Community engagement efforts** have had mixed success, with companies struggling to build public support in hostile markets like San Francisco and Philadelphia. ## Legal and Economic Consequences Law enforcement agencies increasingly treat robot attacks as serious crimes, with prosecutors pursuing felony charges in cases involving significant property damage. Walker Reed Quinn's prosecution represents a test case for how courts will handle repeat robot vandalism, potentially establishing precedents for treating coordinated anti-robot activism as domestic terrorism. Beyond criminal penalties, attackers face substantial civil liability—Burton's $22,000 tire damage demonstrates the financial risks. Rising vandalism costs force companies to increase insurance coverage and security measures, potentially slowing deployment timelines and increasing operational expenses across the industry. ## The Path Forward: Technology vs. Human Agency The rise of "clanker attacks" signals a fundamental tension between technological progress and human agency in urban spaces. As documented incidents escalate from 16 major events in 2023 to over 40 in 2026, the resistance movement shows no signs of abating. **Policy implications** are significant. Cities must now consider robot-specific regulations, designated lanes, and public acceptance campaigns before approving deployments. The current approach of treating sidewalks as testing grounds for experimental technology appears increasingly untenable. **Technology adaptations** will likely include hardened designs, alternative deployment strategies, and enhanced security features. Some companies are exploring robot-only zones or partnerships with local businesses to create safe harbors for autonomous systems. **Timeline predictions** suggest the conflict will intensify before resolution. Industry experts estimate 2027-2028 as the critical period when either public acceptance emerges or regulatory backlash forces significant deployment restrictions. The companies deploying these systems face a fundamental question: How do you integrate robots into human spaces when humans actively resist them? The answer will determine whether the promise of automated delivery and transportation becomes reality or remains a Silicon Valley aspiration shattered by street-level rebellion. **As labor displacement accelerates over the next decade, the current scattered incidents of robot vandalism may prove to be merely the opening skirmishes of a much larger economic war.** When millions of drivers, delivery workers, and logistics employees face unemployment due to automation, the isolated acts of resistance documented here could evolve into organized labor strikes, coordinated infrastructure sabotage, and political movements powerful enough to halt AI deployment entirely. The 300,000 at-risk driving jobs represent just the beginning—as AI capabilities expand into warehousing, retail, and service sectors, the pool of displaced workers will grow exponentially. By 2030, "clanker attacks" may no longer be viral curiosities but daily realities in a society grappling with the fundamental question of whether technological progress should proceed at the expense of human livelihoods. The robots rolling through today's streets are not just delivering food—they are delivering a preview of the economic disruption to come. The war between humans and robots has begun in earnest. The outcome will shape not just the future of urban automation, but the broader relationship between society and artificial intelligence. ## Sources - [USA Today: "Video shows Philly residents targeting Uber Eats delivery robot"](https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2026/03/20/delivery-robot-vandalized-philadelphia-video/89250329007/) (March 20, 2026) - [Block Club Chicago: "Robots Gone Wild: Food Delivery Robots Smash 2 Bus Shelters In Chicago"](https://blockclubchicago.org/2026/03/25/robots-gone-wild-food-delivery-robots-smash-2-bus-shelters-in-chicago/) (March 25, 2026) - [Chicago Sun-Times: "Delivery robot smashes into Old Town bus shelter in second crash of the week"](https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/2026/03/25/delivery-robot-smashes-into-old-town-bus-shelter-in-second-crash-of-the-week) (March 25, 2026) - [NBC Chicago: "Delivery robot goes viral after shattering West Town bus shelter glass"](https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/delivery-robot-goes-viral-after-shattering-west-town-bus-shelter-glass/3913225/) (March 24, 2026) - [Fifth Level Consulting: "Autonomous Vehicle Vandalism"](https://fifthlevelconsulting.com/autonomous-vehicle-vandalism/) (2024) - [SF Standard: "Waymo robotaxi goes up in flames in Chinatown after crowd attacks vehicle"](https://sfstandard.com/2024/02/10/waymo-robotaxi-goes-up-in-flames-in-chinatown-after-crowd-attacks-vehicle/) (February 10, 2024) - [Polymarket Tweet](https://x.com/Polymarket/status/2039349667624812972) (March 31, 2026)