Sidewalk scooter riders, beware: AI-powered ‘Lime Vision’ will soon call you out

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By news.saerio.com

Sidewalk scooter riders, beware: AI-powered ‘Lime Vision’ will soon call you out


A Lime e-scooter rider cruises past on the sidewalk in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood, home to Amazon HQ. New tech on the scooters coming this summer will generate audible and app alerts warning riders to move to a safer riding area. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

Lime scooters in Seattle are going to start policing their own riders, using cameras and AI to catch — and call out — bad behavior in real time.

The San Francisco-based micromobility company’s newly developed “Lime Vision” system will make its national debut in Seattle this summer, using a front-mounted camera and a trained AI model to detect whether a rider is in the road, a bike lane, or on the sidewalk.

When bad behavior is detected, the scooter emits an audible alert and sends a real-time notification to the Lime app, warning the rider to move to a safer location.

“The audible alert very clearly makes you and others around you aware that the vehicle is not where it’s supposed to be,” said Parker Dawson, Lime’s senior regional lead of government relations for the Pacific Northwest.

The rollout is part of a broader set of planned safety features aimed at protecting both riders and pedestrians, and will eventually extend to Lime’s e-bike fleet.

Reckless riding can be a serious problem, especially for riders who don’t wear a helmet. KUOW reported last year that Seattle’s Harborview Medical Center saw 163 serious injuries in 2024 from e-scooter or e-bike mishaps, many of them head injuries.

Lime scooters and bikes lined up in downtown Seattle. (GeekWire File Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

Half of Lime’s 7,000 standing scooters in Seattle will be outfitted with the Lime Vision by June 1 — utilizing a mix of new devices and retrofits — just in time for the massive influx of visitors expected for the FIFA World Cup. The remainder of the fleet will be completed in the following months.

It’s the latest evolution of the City of Seattle’s e-bike and e-scooter share program, which currently includes both Lime and Bird.

Lime, which operates in more than 280 cities across nearly 30 countries, arrived in Seattle in July 2017, and counts the city as its oldest active market and a global testing ground for new hardware, including throttled e-bikes and the “LimeGlider” sit-down scooter.

With 15,000 deployed devices, including bikes, Lime riders recorded more than 10 million trips in Seattle in 2025, with Pike Place Market ranking as the top destination in all of North America last year.

To help manage the volume, the Seattle Department of Transportation began adding more than 200 new parking “corrals” downtown and around the city last fall to alleviate sidewalk clutter and encourage proper docking.

GeekWire is in touch with SDOT about the Lime Vision technology, and we’ll update this post when there’s more information to share.



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