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Only Self-Awareness Can Keep Drones Out of Do Not Fly Zones

szczys writes: Chris Anderson is on the bleeding edge of the drone world, having founded 3D Robotics (drone manufacturer) and DIY Drones (enthusiast site). He takes on the issue of people flying drones where they shouldn't, and concludes that making drones self aware is the best solution. This isn't the "robots are trying to kill you" type of self awareness. Instead, it considers drone type, operator, and location, to establish if all those factors equate to a safe flight area. This is an important issue — in the last few months, there have been several stories about drones in places they should not have been. This included incidents like disrupting the efforts of airborne firefighting and interfering with a police manhunt.

5 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. Drones and Morons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whenever I read an article about "drones" they are invariable talking about radio controlled quad copters. They're not autonomous, they're controlled by individuals. People have been flying radio controlled planes as a hobby for 60+ years. We don't have a drone problem, we have a moron problem.

    1. Re:Drones and Morons by buck-yar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We don't have a drone problem, we have a fear mongering society problem. A society that demonizes things out of hysteria. A society that wants feel good knee-jerk reaction legislation (that IMO is often counter productive).

  2. Re:No... by szczys · · Score: 3, Informative

    Problem not solved. Sure you can arrest and charge someone for breaking the rules but the vast majority of these cases are people not knowing any better. If these drones are interfering with full-sized aircraft, penalties don't prevent the danger presented by naive operators. This is an educational problem -- people need to know there are places you're not allowed to fly and that it's important to stay out of those with their hobby equipment.

  3. Re:GPS fencing is probably not a bad idea by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What industry? My drone is fully autonomous and yet home made and open source. GPS fencing isn't as trivial as you think. There are literally millions of technical no fly zones and that doesn't even begin to consider transient zones like during fire fighting exercises.

    GPS fencing is not only unenforceable but also technically infeasible.

  4. Re:GPS fencing is probably not a bad idea by buck-yar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    GPS is 1575mhz, which is affected by line-of-sight. If you don't have a clear line-of-sight, your location will be off. Inside my house, my location sometimes bounces around by 2 miles on my multirotor.

    Outside its affected by anything that refracts, diffracts or reflects radio waves. IE power lines, buildings, anything really. Power lines near my drone put it 10 feet to the opposite side.

    Or if you really want to affect it, just cup your hands around it. Doesn't take much to interfere with it.