Key Points
  • A new DJI update enables everyday operators to fly their drones over and into airports, military bases, sensitive infrastructure, wildfires, and national no-fly zones in the United States.
  • Hundreds of sensitive-site operators may be forced to deploy counter-drone solutions. The update comes just days after a DJI drone crashed into a firefighting waterbomber over California.
  • DJI promises to place “control back in the hands of the drone operators, in line with regulatory principles of the operator bearing final responsibility” — and tells Hunterbrook that it has given “authorities the tools they need to enforce existing rules.”
  • DJI, by one estimate, controls 90% of the global consumer drone market. The company currently faces the risk of a total ban in the U.S.
  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    To add to this, if the drone has a camera (most do,)

    Then the app gets to see that and presumably, DJI shares the video with the CCP. Because. Chinese company. All that.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      All this shit is the main reason I’ve never bought a drone. One of these days I’m going to figure out what parts to buy to build my own open source one, but I haven’t had the time yet.

      Multiply that by every other category of electronic product, and avoiding spyware and other enshittification is a fucking full-time job.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        virtually any “bind and fly” or “almost ready to fly” bird will do what you need, if you’re willing to pilot it yourself. if you’re not, check out ardupilot (it’s still around. but stay away fromthe ardupilot module/apm controllers, they’re old and unsupported. it’s based on the arduino family of microcontrollers.)

      • YerbaYerba@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        In the US there are a lot of rules about RC aircraft now. You have to include a transmitter that broadcasts the GPS location if you are flying outside of designated RC clubs fields. Most EU countries have similar rules.

        Unless you keep things under 200g.