SURVEILLANCE DRONES - See the BIG BROTHER DRONE FUTURE Coming to a City Near You.
Reacting
to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos' unveiling of prototype Octocopters that would
deliver items weighing up to 2.3kg to customers within 30 minutes of an
order being placed online, Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas) cautioned that
without careful regulations, "companies could use drones for information
gathering whether that is taking a photograph of your patio furniture
or recording the make and model of your car."
"Coloradans will
accept this technology only if they are certain their privacy is
protected and that Americans won't be victims of surveillance or privacy
abuse by private unmanned aerial system operators," said Udall.
Many
have speculated that the only way to deter theft of the drones or the
products they are delivering to customers will be to attach high-tech
surveillance cameras to the devices that would feed live video footage
back to a central database.
"One solution that has been floated
is installing cameras on the drones, but just the mention of eyes in the
sky got America's privacy-obsessed sections seething," reports
FirstPost.
The Octocopters set to be used by Amazon are designed to carry cameras weighing up to 5 pounds.
The
U.S. Army said its latest defense technology — a vehicle-mounted laser —
has passed a recent test with flying colors, successfully shooting a
drone from the sky and intercepting and destroying several mortar
rounds.
The technology probably won't be completely operational
and ready for mission until 2022, because developers are going to be
working on increasing the power and range of the lasers. And the Army
still has decide whether or not to buy the system, officials said to
AFP.
Customs and Border Protection, which operates under DHS,
says that the Predator B drone was being flown on a "border security
mission" 20 miles southwest of San Diego when it encountered an unknown
mechanical failure.
By 2016, CBP wants drones flying in domestic
airspace 24 hours a day, seven days a week to ensure a so-called
"layered security strategy."
DARPA and the US Army have taken the
wraps off ARGUS-IS, a 1.8-gigapixel video surveillance platform that
can resolve details as small as six inches from an altitude of 20,000
feet (6km), ExtremeTech reports.
The U.S. State Department
canceled its $1 billion surveillance drone competition, saying none of
the proposals met its requirements, according to the U.S. government's
Federal Business Opportunities website.
The State
Department "plans to examine closely the requirements stipulated in the
solicitation with the intent of developing and releasing a new" request
for drone proposals, according to the notice.
The Texas
legislature passed a bill this past weekend that would see a blanket ban
on capturing moving or still images on private property with an
unmanned drone.
The legislation, House Bill 912, authored by Rep.
Lance Gooden, R-Terrell, will make it a Class C misdemeanor for anyone
to use a drone for surveillance of an individual without their prior
consent. Further distributing any images captured as a result of such
activity will be a class B misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to
$10,000.
The bill states that "Each image a person possesses,
discloses, displays, distributes, or otherwise uses in violation of this
section is a separate offense. An offense under this section for the
disclosure, display, distribution, or other use of an image is a Class B
misdemeanor."
Exceptions to the legislation, known as the 'Texas
Privacy Act', will be police use of drones to pursue known felons or
conduct criminal investigations. Using drones to investigate
misdemeanors will require a warrant. In addition, use of drones to
survey accidents, disasters or potential hazardous spills will be
permitted.
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