🦾 JOIN THE FORCE - KNIGHTSCOPE CAREER NIGHT!
Meet the humans behind the machines.
Join us at Knightscope Headquarters (KHQ) for an inside look at the team building the nation’s first Autonomous Security Force. Explore open opportunities, meet our engineers, executives, and operators, and discover whether you can do your life’s best work on a mission that matters.
Whether you’re actively seeking your next challenge or simply curious about the future of autonomous security, this is your opportunity to see what we’re building - and why.
Serve your country. 🇺🇸
Thu 25 June 2026
5PM – 8PM
Knightscope Headquarters (KHQ)
Sunnyvale, California
More details coming soon ...
The mission starts here. 🤖
Two executives. Same enterprise. Same board.
One signs a single recurring contract that covers detection, monitoring, response, and reporting. When something goes wrong at 3 AM, one phone rings.
The other manages eight to twelve vendors. When something goes wrong at 3 AM, the phone tree starts.
The first is the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO). The second is the Chief Security Officer (CSO).
In our newest thought leadership piece, Founder and CEO William Santana Li lays out why this asymmetry, defining the industry for thirty years, is no longer defensible. And what a true physical security Managed Service Provider (MSP) looks like.
Read One Throat to Choke: The Operating Model Physical Security Forgot to Build.
Link: https://t.co/CqYfV52JMv
Join Eric J. Rose, President, Knightscope Security Force, tomorrow at the ASIS International San Antonio Chapter meeting as he explores how robotics, autonomous systems, and emerging technologies are reshaping the future of security guarding operations.
Don't miss this opportunity to connect with fellow security professionals, gain valuable insights into evolving security strategies, and discuss how technology is transforming the industry.
Registration required: https://t.co/NHtVoBAUMu
Mandatory registration by 06.01.26
📅 June 2, 2026
📍 Whataburger Headquarters - 300 Concord Plaza Dr. San Antonio, TX 78216
🕚 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM
🍽 Lunch Included
Not sure where to begin with improving security at your site or public space? Start with the fundamentals:
⚠️ Assess your risks: Identify when and where incidents happen, and where blind spots exist.
🦺 Increase visibility: If you can’t see it, you can’t respond to it. Expand security coverage with a mix of augmented human guard expertise and autonomous security for consistent, reliable monitoring.
📊 Leverage data: Use incident reports and trends to evaluate performance and guide smarter decisions overtime.
Knightscope Autonomous Security Robots are built with advanced object avoidance and smart navigation, all of which are used to dynamically analyze their environment in real time.
If something enters their path, whether an object or person, they respond safely and predictably: pausing until the way is clear or smoothly navigating around obstacles at walking speed and within their patrol zone.
Safety is always the priority, for the community and for the patrol itself.
During a Huntington Park City Council Meeting, Chief of Police Cosme Lozano at Huntington Park Police Department had the following to say when asked on their Knightscope partnership renewal:
“The reality is that a patrol officer cannot do what modern technology can do through the use of this robot. One of the significant features of the robot is that it records activity in high definition 24 hours a day seven days a week. It also provides an alert button feature where patrons of the park can communicate with our police dispatch should they feel they need to.
It provides a license plate reader feature where the robot is actually collecting data of license plates that it can read during its route and it collects this data, it just simply stores it. We can go back and feed a license plate into the system to see if that license plate had a hit in the park and that could help in investigations.
It also has an intruder sensor, if you will, and basically it lets us know somebody is in the park during hours when the robot is programmed to designate the park as being closed. The robot technology is not intended to eliminate or reduce the work of human police officers, simply to enhance our ability to deliver police services.
You can think of it if you will as a patrol vehicle. Meaning, the patrol vehicle creates the presence and that extension of the police department and quite honestly the officer wouldn't be able to do the effective job that he does without the patrol vehicle. So it is not a replacement of, it's simply to enhance the way we deliver police service to the community and to leverage modern technology to engage all of these added features”
Honored that Eric J Rose (President, Knightscope Security Force) was invited as a VIP guest of the Commandant of the Marine Corps to an Evening Parade at Marine Barracks Washington - the "Oldest Post of the Corps," home to 8th & I since 1801.
The evening celebrated the upcoming 250th birthday of the United States of America.
Grateful to the Marines of 8th & I and to the military leaders who carry that 250-year tradition forward.
Built in America to Secure America. 🇺🇸
Where does a multi-vendor security architecture actually fail?
Not inside any one vendor. It fails at the seams.
The camera detects motion. The video management platform classifies it. The alarm fires. The central station receives it. A dispatcher calls the guard service. The guard service radios the post. The officer responds.
Each step is a handoff between systems, contracts, and humans who do not share a common operating picture.
In cybersecurity, this is called the swivel-chair problem. SOC analysts physically rotated between consoles to correlate events. The cost was measured in seconds — and seconds matter.
The MSP model solved the swivel chair by integrating the consoles, the data, and the accountability under one operator. Read more on this solution
https://t.co/CAOUgDezBt
Physical security has more seams than cybersecurity ever did. The cost of those seams is what an integrated operating model is built to eliminate.
AI is reshaping industries at an unprecedented pace — but how do leaders turn innovation into real-world impact?
Join Knightscope Chairman & CEO William Santana Li for a compelling conversation at the TechEquity AI Forum with NVIDIA Senior Technical Program Manager Abhijeet Joshi.
Together, they’ll discuss the future of AI, intelligent automation, and the technologies transforming industries and public safety.
📅 Tuesday, May 26
🕟 4:30 PM – 9:00 PM PDT
📍 135 Constitution Dr, Menlo Park, CA
🎟 FREE to attend — both in person and online!
Registration Options:
🔹 In-Person (Approval Required) — includes live stream access
🔹 Online — free live stream access
Register here:
https://t.co/haZ5xhgcY6
Connect with the speakers:
William Santana Li: https://t.co/GpFaCR3o8y
Abhijeet Joshi: https://t.co/aH079xBAOS
A student runs to a blue light tower during an emergency… but it’s offline.
It’s not just a system failure — it’s a reputational disaster.
🔴 Lawsuits
🔴 Media attention
🔴 Loss of public trust
Don’t wait for a crisis to expose outdated systems.
https://t.co/M54jlJxZi3
Blue Light Towers aren’t just for colleges.
They're protecting:
🏥 Healthcare facilities
🏙️ Downtown districts
🛒 Retail centers
🚊 Transit hubs
Wherever people move and emergencies can happen, Blue Light belongs.
Two executives. Same enterprise. Same board.
One signs a single recurring contract that covers detection, monitoring, response, and reporting. When something goes wrong at 3 AM, one phone rings.
The other manages eight to twelve vendors. When something goes wrong at 3 AM, the phone tree starts.
The first is the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO). The second is the Chief Security Officer (CSO).
In our newest thought leadership, Founder and CEO William Santana Li lays out why this asymmetry — defining for thirty years — is no longer defensible. And what an actual physical-security Managed Service Provider (MSP) looks like.
Read “One Throat to Choke: The Operating Model Physical Security Forgot to Build.”
https://t.co/U4SlJjKF38
For years we’ve talked about security like it’s a choice.
More guards or more technology. Humans or automation.
But that’s not really the problem.
Most security programs already have plenty of tools and people involved.
Where things break down is in between those pieces. One system detects something, another records it, someone else gets notified later… and no one really owns the outcome.
The future of security isn’t about picking sides. It’s about designing systems where people and technology actually work together.
More on this here: https://t.co/CkHn9YHq1D
A full day at KHQ with our passionate friends from Transportation Solutions & Lighting — a strategic reseller partner in Emergency Communication Devices.
Walked the hardware. Mesmerized by software. Sharpened the roadmap. Aligned the plan.
And thank you Team TS&L for the support and all you do to improve safety across the country.
Built in America. To secure America.
$KSCP
BRIEFING: Q1 2026 Financial Results
▸ Revenue up 106% to $6M
▸ Gross margin turned positive
▸ Four operational pillars of the Autonomous Security Force now in place
$KSCP
Knightscope Announces Nearly $4 Million in New and Recurring Contracts
Diversified Bookings Span Eight Verticals, Led by Critical Infrastructure and Retail & Consumer
The breadth and recurring character of these contracts continue to expand the client base and operational footprint into which the Autonomous Security Force (ASF) will scale over time – offering an integrated alternative to the fragmented patchwork of hardware, software, and labor vendors that has long defined the security industry.
$KSCP
Security threats don’t clock out.
But human teams eventually have to.
That’s where Knightscope’s Autonomous Security Robots step in.
✅ 24/7 patrol
✅ License plate reading
✅ AI-powered detection
👉 Learn how AI + robotics are reshaping public safety: https://t.co/RqGjFdr9z3
A lot of security tools are built to do one thing well.
The harder part is bringing those pieces together in a way that actually supports decision-making.
KSOC sits in that space. It connects what’s happening on the ground with what teams need to understand, so coverage doesn’t just exist — it becomes usable.