I can't wait for one of these things to smash into my roof so I can sue the city and win millions. I'll even take a direct hit on the head, since you can't hurt me there (but they don't know that). Millions, I tell you.
This is serious shit. SPD will use these things for surveillance now -- then weaponize them. What's to stop SPD from equipping drones with stun grenades or tear gas? Watch for them hovering over the next peaceful protest against US military aggression. It's time to howl baby and rage against the unmanned aerial vehicles.
I don't understand how the nature of crime has changed so much, that just having police officers who are involved in their communities isn't enough, and now instead, we need SkyNet.
Not a huge fan of FOX news, but one of their commentators had it right: the first person to shoot down a drone hovering over their house will be a folk hero in this country.
@6 Yes, my first thought on seeing this post was "10-guage magnum."
Little fucker would have to be pretty low, though. Will is on crack. Even a big shotgun won't have a good chance of bringing one down from more than 50 yards. A slingshot might work if it's 10 feet outside your window.
@8, ahem. Not to mention the wisdom of discharging firearms straight up into the air. With any luck, that round will pierce your skull on its way down again. Even barring that, it's against the law to discharge a firearm, and after you fail to hit your target they will have all the video evidence from the drone to send you to Guantanamo. In fact, it would be fun to send these low over houses specifically for the purpose of drawing out gun nuts and locking them up afterwards.
@10 Can you provide a reference? The previous purchases was made with Department of Homeland Security money.
EFF and MuckRock have filed hundreds of related public records requests nationwide. They provided some informative analysis of the results from here in Seattle (see "Seattle police seek more drones while two sit unused; SPD rescinds drone usage guidelines without replacing them".
The documents we received from Seattle Police Department are perhaps the most troubling so far. Earlier this year, we reported how the Seattle City Council found out about the Seattle Police Departmentâs two drones only after Seattleâs name showed up on the FAA list released as part of EFFâs Freedom of Information …. When the police department went before the city council to apologize, they also pledged to work with the local ACLU affiliate to draw up privacy guidelines.
As MuckRock described, in July, Seattle Police Department issued departmental drone guidelines which, âlimited UAS use to specific circumstances, underscoring that drones were not to be used âto provide random surveillance.ââ But less than a month later, the policy was inexplicably eliminated: âA directive dated August 15, 2012 rescinded the drone deployment guidelines, without indicating any replacement guidelines or explaining the reasoning behind the move.â
While the department has rescinded the limitations, they also plan to expand their drone program and purchase two new units, despite the fact that the two drones theyâve already purchased sit unused. Given that the documents also suggest that âthe FAA will significantly expand the area where [SPD] can operate [drones] in 2012â it is imperative that the City Council holds the police department to implementing binding privacy guidelines to protect its citizens.
My comment was a joke, though: Cyberdyne Systems is the name of the weapons technology manufacturer that unleashes the Terminator in the movie series. (Get it?)
@3 ftw. Slingshots and bb guns work amazingly well.
Lock and load.
Little fucker would have to be pretty low, though. Will is on crack. Even a big shotgun won't have a good chance of bringing one down from more than 50 yards. A slingshot might work if it's 10 feet outside your window.
EFF and MuckRock have filed hundreds of related public records requests nationwide. They provided some informative analysis of the results from here in Seattle (see "Seattle police seek more drones while two sit unused; SPD rescinds drone usage guidelines without replacing them".
Yesterday, Trevor Timm at EFF wrote:
My comment was a joke, though: Cyberdyne Systems is the name of the weapons technology manufacturer that unleashes the Terminator in the movie series. (Get it?)
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/26432519
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/26433114
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/26434406