It is our interaction biologically with our environment over long periods of evolution that has given us the extremely high entropy that we can't transfer to machines. That entropy is buried not only in our genes but in our living biology (which includes the billions of variants of living personalities, cultures, etc). The robots could process information faster, but that gives them no inherent evolutionary advantage in terms of resilient creativity and adaptation due to the historical accumulation of entropy in the species.
Our genetic record (which is essentially most of what remains from all that entropy) is a few GB. If you take into account on top of that, all epigenetic stuff and I'm being extremely large, lets say a factor of 1000 we end up with at most a few TB. It is much, much less than that, but I don't need to argue here.
So all of our accumulated information is less than a few terabytes. And the machines already have access to that. Our genetic code is on the internet. Most biological information we know is available to machines, in as much as they need to know it.
It is peanuts. It is peanuts because of the monstrous inefficiency of evolution. The gazillions of Etabytes of entropy have only resulted in at most a few terabytes of useful data.