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Thursday, November 14, 2013

Civilian drones over America cause various debates




On Thursday, the Federal Aviation Administration released a project, the so-called roadmap. The main aim of it is to integrate drones into civilian airspace by 2015. However, the roadmap has caused strong reactions among privacy advocates.
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In response to that, Michael Huerta, the FAA Administrator corrected that his organization is working hard in establishing aviation safety not on imposing new privacy regulations. The new document consists of 74 pages and is devoted to establishing new technologies that will allow drones to operate among the other civilian aircrafts in the air. Each drone will come with its own privacy policy that will be open to general public.
Opponents of the program have instantly announced their doubts regarding the “privacy regulations”, mentioning that several precedents on that matter could be found and that the Unmanned Aerial Systems could come up with a $10 billion industry.
However, such precedents indeed happened in the era of the birth of aviation. Back then landowners owned the air above their heads, hypothetically all the way up into space. And the owners were not happy that the craft that was passing through “their” territory. Not mentioning the questions of air pollution, noise etc. In the end, the story was transformed into a law, if to be more concrete, into the organization, the Federal Aviation Administration.
The similar situation will have to happen with civilian drones as well. It might take certain time and a lot of debates but no matter what the activists say, with certain tests it will be implemented into the current air reality.

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