The "creepiness" isn't a bug; it's a conflict of expectations.
We are looking at a machine that mimics the human form (bipedal, two arms) but completely ignores Biological Constraints (tendons, ligaments, joint limits).
When it rotates 180 degrees at the waist, our brains trigger a "Body Horror" response because we subconsciously map our own anatomy onto it. We see a broken spine. The robot just sees a shorter path.
This is purely Unconstrained Kinematics. Hyundai isn't trying to build a "Better Human." They are building a "Bipedal Forklift" that just happens to fit through our doorframes.
It’s a tool. Let’s stop judging it like it’s supposed to be one of us.
> It’s a tool. Let’s stop judging it like it’s supposed to be one of us.
Tech CEOs and their breathless AI hype have demonstrated to everyone how dreadfully effective it is to weaponize anthropomorphization and pareidolia.