Call me skeptical, but I don't think these things are reliable enough to have 30,000 flying over civilian populations. Not to mention the Big Brother aspect. I'm going to get my real estate lawyer to look in to this!
And it won't take long for the hackers to take control of their navigation and steal one. LOL
If you want to be, press one. If you want not to be, press 2
Republicans are red, democrats are blue, neither of them, gives a flip about you.
I hear it's clothing itself that make you visible to most drones. it you don't want to be seen by the drones you need to be naked anytime you are outside. :woo hoo: :woo hoo:
When the U.S. Department of Homeland Security dared a Texas university research group to bring down a flying drone, the team accepted the challenge and did just that.
Turns out it's not too difficult to hack a drone.
Nor too expensive, for that matter. RT reports that the University of Texas at Austin scientists, led by Professor Todd Humphreys, managed to bring down a flying drone with a spoofer costing just $1,000. The research group gained control of the University-owned drone by using a device to hack its GPS system, according to Scientific American.
What is the goal of the drones and what will be different after we make that investment of both the money and the last threads of privacy we have. What do people expect to be better after the drones are out there. More people in US prisons where they belong?