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New FAA Rules Allow US Companies To Fly Drones Without a Pilot's License (faa.gov)

On Tuesday, the Obama administration announced new rules for commercial drones. It states that drone pilots can now fly without waiting to get permission from the government. Previously, commercial operators were required to apply for a waiver from the FAA to operate small drones for commercial purposes. According to the new regulation, a drone must weigh less than 25kg, and it must fly under 400 feet (122m) and at a maximum speed of 161km per hour. DJI spokesman Adam Lisberg said: This is a major development for the future of drones in America. It means that businesses and farmers and government agencies and academic researchers can put drones to work without having to get an airplane pilot's license or follow other onerous rules. Those were pretty high barriers to entry. Part 107 is a vote of confidence from the FAA that drones can be safely integrated into the national airspace, and that a wider adoption of drones for all sorts of non-recreational uses will bring real benefits to America.More coverage on The Verge, and Reuters.

4 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Look out below!! by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, we currently have millions of people flying millions of drones with many, many millions of hours in the air. How many have you heard of actually hurting people ... compared to, say, wet restaurant floors, police vehicles in high speed chases, poison salad bars, suicidally crazy airline pilots, or medical errors in hospitals?

    And, handing out licenses in the name of "corporate profit?" Like, say, when a guy who runs a landscaping business wants to take some photos of his work? Or when a guy who does roofing for a living wants to check some gutters that are 40' off the ground? Eeeeevil corporations being all corporate and evil and trying to make money!

    How do you even function, from minute to minute, as furious as you are at all of the people around you who are trying to make some money? Also, how is it that you feed yourself without making money?

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  2. Re:So... by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's ok to fly whatever drones you want if you're doing it commercially, but flying it for leisure is a nono.

    What makes you say that? It's been a no-no for commercial operators (without real pilots' certs and 333 waivers) to use them while the very same people, using them recreationally, have been perfectly legal all along. You have it exactly backwards, until this change, and now both groups can use them. Of course they're still subject to all sorts of rules related to where, how, over what, how high, etc., and all of the machines have to be registered with the DoT.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  3. Re:Been driving cars, trucks & bikes for 35 ye by tsqr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    when can i get a waiver for driving on the ground, and they let these people fly drones commercially, what happens when the Coca Cola bottling company uses drones to deliver cases of coke to the local stores and they drop them on top of people? there needs to be accountability and liability for commercial drones flying over populated areas

    From the FAA press release: "The new regulations also address height and speed restrictions and other operational limits, such as prohibiting flights over unprotected people on the ground who aren’t directly participating in the UAS operation." Also, see SceentCone's comment regarding the laws of physics.

    Amazon's drone delivery dreams aside, the vast majority of commercial drone usage is going to be infrastructure (power grid, railway bridges, etc.) or agriculture (crop monitoring). Plus (maybe) inspection of hard-to-reach areas of homes such as roofs and rain gutters.

  4. Re:Give them enough rope to hang themselves by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Enjoy it while you can horseless carriage fans. There are at least a few morons among you who will still do stupid irresponsible things with their toys, someone will get hurt or killed or there will be massive property damage, and the local city council will throw up it's hands and say "We tried trusting you, but you clearly can't be trusted!" and they'll get taken away from you. On that day I and many others will rejoice that the scourge of pesky, noisy, death traps will finally be ended. Then automobiles will be in the hands of professional drivers and the military, as it should be.