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In a sea of slop and risks, AI is helping distraught humans find their lost pets

AI isn't all slop, it's quietly reuniting people with their pets.

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An owner happily giving their dog a high-five in Disney+'s Pets.
Disney

AI in any headlines is usually associated with deepfakes, misinformation, and general frustration. But in the middle of all that noise, there’s one use case that feels refreshingly human.

It is helping people find their lost pets.

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Technology using tools powered by image recognition is quietly becoming one of the most effective ways to reunite missing pets with their owners, and it’s surprisingly quick and efficient.

How AI is finding the lost pets

This isn’t one of those Hollywood hacker tech where AI scours all the public cameras and uses recognition software to find your pet. The process is rather simple. Pet owners upload pictures of their missing animals to platforms like Petco Love Lost, which then uses AI to scan thousands of images from rescue organizations, social media posts, and animal shelters.

AI basically analyzes various details like facial structure, foot patterns, and ear shape to find potential matches. This allows pets to be found, even if they look different after being lost. The last part is key here since many pets that go missing for days or weeks can look messier and dirtier, becoming unrecognizable to even the actual pet owners. But AI doesn’t have that problem.

It isn’t perfect, but genuinely useful

There have already been multiple reports of people being reunited with their pets. Some have been found in under 24 hours, while others reconnected after a pet was lost for more than two months. What makes the tool powerful is its scale, with platforms like Petco Love Lost pulling data from thousands of shelters and rescues to create a centralized system that didn’t exist before.

While this isn’t a replacement for basics like ID tags or microchipping, it acts as a powerful second layer that increases the odds of a reunion. For all the concerns surrounding AI, this is one of those rare cases where the technology feels meaningful, similar to how Google is using AI to lessen the impact of flights.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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