PetPause

The project PetPause was announced by Oliver Bendel at the FHNW School of Business and is set to begin in February 2026. It introduces a pet-controlled pause system for devices and machines used in everyday domestic environments. Pets such as dogs and cats regularly interact with automated systems including feeding machines, toys, robots, and smart home devices, yet they usually have no way to influence when these machines operate. Continuous activity, noise, or movement can cause stress, anxiety, or even injury. PetPause enables animals to actively pause machines through a simple, physically accessible interface such as a button, floor sensor, or capacitive switch. When triggered, the machine automatically enters a predefined pause or rest mode, for example by stopping movement or silencing sounds. The system avoids cameras, animal detection, and data collection, relying solely on deliberate physical interaction. By combining technical simplicity with ethical consideration, PetPause demonstrates how machines can respect animal well-being without monitoring or surveillance.

Fig.: A cat with a toy