iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Drone Aircraft Code Of Conduct Unveiled

Drone Aircraft Code Of Conduct

KEVIN BEGOS   07/03/12 02:10 PM ET  AP

PITTSBURGH — A trade group for drone aircraft manufacturers and operators has released the industry's first code of conduct in response to growing privacy concerns.

The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International said Monday that the recommendations for "safe, non-intrusive operation" are meant to guide operators and reassure a public leery of the possibility of spy drones flying undetected over their homes.

"We understand as an industry that we've got a public relations problem," said Paul McDuffee, a director of the association who helped draft the recommendations.

Drones, small airplanes or helicopters operated remotely by pilots from the ground, can be equipped with sophisticated cameras and even weapons. They have been used to spy on and hunt down al-Qaida terrorists in Pakistan, but the rapidly declining size and cost of them has prompted fears that thousands could be operating in the U.S. within a decade, with little effective oversight. Some of the drones weigh just a few pounds and can fit in a person's hands.

Citizens, civil liberties groups and politicians have voiced worries that the small aircraft raise the specter of a "surveillance society." Currently there are only about 300 authorized federal permits to operate such aircraft, along with an unknown number of unlicensed amateurs, who are supposed to keep their aircraft within sight.

The new recommendations by the association, a non-profit based in Arlington, Va., that has members in more than 60 countries, pledge to "respect the privacy of individuals" and the concerns of the public and to follow all federal, state and local laws. They also pledge to ensure that remote drone pilots are properly trained and to respect "other users of the airspace."

The language on privacy is good, but it's not enough, American Civil Liberties Union lobbyist Chris Calabrese said.

"I think it's really important that they're paying attention to privacy. That's to their credit," Calabrese said. "But I can't imagine they expect this to quell privacy concerns."

Calabrese added that ultimately even well-meaning guidelines from a private group aren't legally binding on public and private organizations around the country.

"I think Congress needs to step in. This is new technology. It's potentially incredibly invasive," he said. "People are profoundly discomforted by the idea of drones monitoring them."

Some law enforcement agencies have already purchased powerful drones.

A county sheriff's office in Texas used a homeland security grant to buy a $300,000, 50-pound ShadowHawk helicopter drone for its SWAT team. Randy McDaniel, chief deputy with the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office, said earlier this year his office had no plans to arm the drone, but he left open the possibility the agency might decide to adapt it to fire tear gas canisters and rubber bullets.

McDuffee, who works for Insitu, a Boeing Co. subsidiary that designs and builds drones, called the wide range of drone aircraft "the next latest and greatest thing in aviation," noting that there's interest from law enforcement, first responders, scientists and private industry, such as farmers who want to monitor or spray crops. The permits are issued by the Federal Aviation Administration, which is working on new rules that will greatly expand legal uses.

The drone market is expected to nearly double over the next 10 years, from current worldwide expenditures of nearly $6 billion annually to more than $11 billion, with police departments accounting for a significant part of that growth.

Earlier this year, Congress, under pressure from the U.S. Department of Defense and drone manufacturers, ordered the FAA to give drones greater access to civilian airspace by 2015. The mandate, besides applying to military drones, applies to drones operated by private companies and government agencies, including federal, state and local law enforcement.

But privacy concerns have already prompted members of Congress to introduce bills to prohibit any government agency from using a drone to "gather evidence or other information pertaining to criminal conduct or conduct in violation of a regulation" without a warrant.

McDuffee said there are many uses for drones that wouldn't generate controversy. For example, scientists have used drones to monitor airborne pollution levels and numbers of sea lions in the Arctic and to monitor hurricanes.

"They go in places where you would never consider risking a human life," he said.

He added that drones also could be used to create temporary communications networks after natural disasters, if regular service went out.

"They're almost like miniature satellites," McDuffee said. "That's the beauty of these systems."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST TECH

PITTSBURGH — A trade group for drone aircraft manufacturers and operators has released the industry's first code of conduct in response to growing privacy concerns. The Association for Unmanned...
PITTSBURGH — A trade group for drone aircraft manufacturers and operators has released the industry's first code of conduct in response to growing privacy concerns. The Association for Unmanned...
Filed by Bianca Bosker  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 9
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pat2 718
FOSS emergency management software developer
05:29 AM on 07/05/2012
I was just talking to a friend of mine who's a volunteer firefighter in Portugal, as he was about to head out to install software for emergency management at Peneda-Gerêz National Park. I asked how they currently spot fires -- they have people watching in fire towers. UAVs with infrared cameras could detect fires earlier -- my friend says by the time smoke is visible, it's often too late. But, they don't have / can't afford UAVs.

Last year, just after the Sendai tsunami, I asked another friend who's in emergency response about use of satellite data to determine where to send rescuers. He said it's not detailed enough and not frequent enough -- low altitude flights, manned or UAV, would be needed.

Hoping the positive uses for UAVs don't get derailed by the negative uses...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Matthew Reed Bailey
Fallen, yet climbing back out of the darkness
06:46 PM on 07/04/2012
This fear of Drones is so overblown that I can't get my head around it.

In September of 2001, I took a remote control airplane, and flew it around Downtown Houston Texas.

I did this just to see what would happen, because I had a sneaking suspicion that no one would even notice it, despite the significant threat it could have posed.

Yet, my suspicions were confirmed. This aircraft was big enough to have carried a significant payload, and Remote Control Aircraft (the hobbyist variety) have had control systems powerful enough to allow out-of-sight communication since the 1960s. And in 2001, I could have strapped my cell-phone to the thing, with instructions to take a photo every five seconds.

And, if I had been foresighted enough, I could have easily bought a camera to place on the aircraft, with a micro-SSD card, to record the flight, and even a servo to control the camera direction, allowing me to fly the aircraft even when I could not see it.

Drones are, in other words, well within the capability of civilians to operate for a few hundred dollars.

And those small drones would be almost as capable as their larger brethren.
01:26 PM on 07/03/2012
I am worried about robots taking over. This reminds me of I-Robot where the computer system named Vicki took control of USR robots to do her bidding.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Matthew Reed Bailey
Fallen, yet climbing back out of the darkness
06:48 PM on 07/04/2012
You should Google "Cave Man Sci Fi."

You have about as much to worry about a robot takeover as the robots do having to deal with any society they might take over: In other words Nothing at all.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jdjay
10:43 AM on 07/03/2012
We are on the verge of a truly Orwellian science fiction surveillance culture, the new dividing line of extreme haves and have-nots. The completed vision of the neoliberal world order. Of course, if our fearless leaders decided to do the right thing as leaders and made the reforms necessary to bring honesty and integrity back into our economic systems this kind of surveillance would not be necessary. But they, especially the GOP infected men, are foaming at the mouth and determined to institute even more cheating mechanisms into their financial dictatorship.

With the new neoliberal world order and the top .01% hoarding the wealth at an unprecedented rate they are going to need this kind of a system. The neoliberal program is squeezing austerity on a majority of the world while the most wealthy are seeing unprecedented growth. What better time is there to invest in a new revolutionary surveillance culture? When unqualified leaders dominate the world with global economic cheating mechanisms and the public that they are responsible for has basically lost all faith in them, extreme surveillance is about the only thing that will protect them.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:36 AM on 07/04/2012
A "neoliberal world order". Scary. The price of tinfoil is going to spike.

I'm not sure I see anything other than greedy basterds,
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Valerio della Porta
Entrepreneur and Web Developer
09:52 AM on 07/03/2012
FAA regulations generally require pilots to maintain 500 feet of clearance from obstacles so that's the minimum altitude somebody could fly over your house.

However in terms of air rights, a flight by an aircraft in the airspace above the land is a trespass, only if
-- entry into the immediate reaches of the airspace next to the land is involved, and
-- entry interferes substantially with the owner’s actual use and enjoyment of his land.

It would be interesting to test in court if trespassing laws allow you to shoot down the drone.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:28 AM on 07/05/2012
that's assuming a drone is legally similar to a piloted aircraft. It's my understanding that these aircraft do not fall under any specific law.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Valerio della Porta
Entrepreneur and Web Developer
02:40 PM on 07/05/2012
Interesting observation! This is really new legal ground.