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"I went back to science fiction to try a few experiments …and my first experiment was a disaster…"
- Alfred Bester

Juvenile  
  A robot designed to sneak around and spy on people.  

His attention fixed itself on the pack of juveniles. They were here, the earwig-like sleuths. Each juvenile was a foot and a half long. The species scuttled close to the ground - or up vertical surfaces - at ferocious speed, and they noticed everything. These juveniles were inactive. The wardens had unlocked the metal hulls and dug out the report tapes.
Technovelgy from The Man Who Japed, by Philip K. Dick.
Published by Ace Books in 1956
Additional resources -

Here's another descriptive passage showing how people felt about juveniles:

"You were out late last night, Mr. Purcell. Did you have a good time?"

Lord, he cursed. A juvenile must have spotted him. "Not very." He wondered how much it had seen. If it tagged him early in the trip it might have followed the whole way...

Over the decades he had learned to endure the interminable interchange, the stuffy presence of his neighbors packed together in one room. And the whirr of the juveniles as they surrendered their tapes to the Committee representatives.

Take a look at the Halluc II, a dead ringer for the juveniles.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from The Man Who Japed
  More Ideas and Technology by Philip K. Dick
  Tech news articles related to The Man Who Japed
  Tech news articles related to works by Philip K. Dick

Juvenile-related news articles:
  - Sneaky Robots Are Right Around The Corner
  - Surveillance Robots Learn To Hide

Articles related to Robotics
Optimus Robot Will Be A Good Nanny, Says Musk
LORIS Passive-Gripper Climbing Robot
Athena Smart Security Guard Robot With Face Recognition
SpaceHopper Microgravity Robot Lands On Its Feet

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