It will be interesting to see how this plays out in the courts.
http://www.wdrb.com/story/29650818/...or-shooting-down-drone-cites-right-to-privacy
http://www.wdrb.com/story/29650818/...or-shooting-down-drone-cites-right-to-privacy
LeeRevell said:A Peeping Tom is a criminal, whether peeking in our windows or flying over our yards with a camera equipped quadcopter. RC aircraft are fun, but this misuse needs to be stopped, destructively in necessary. I take my privacy seriously.
Seraphim said:Lee
There is no indication of voyeuristic intent on the drone owners. No peeping Tom. There was no trespass - one does own the airspace above ones property. There may have been an invasion of privacy, since the man said he has a six foot privacy fence. It depends on whether or not the fence provided complete privacy.
Whether or not the operator of the drone violated a law, the shooter definitely did. The drone could have come down on the street in front of his home and caused an injury accident, or struck another person. And even though shotguns have more limit effective range, the shotgun blast could have injured another person he didn't know was on the other side of his privacy fence. A single piece of shot, even falling at terminal velocity, could have blinded, caused other serious injury, or even caused a fatality. The shooter was arrogantly stupid. One potential violation of the law doesn't excuse another.
I'm not condoning the drone operator. But I think it's moronic to admire, condone, or emulate such wanton stupidity.
WriterMs said:New idea -- fighting intrusive flying camera with other cameras!
Curbing my well-founded reaction to violently destroy the peeping-tom drone, it occurs to me that another way to make the operators nervous is to use your own camera in an obvious way. For instance, begin using your cell phone to video the drone's behavior.
Have someone get your still camera to record more and to ZOOM in to capture identifying marks on the drone. Do those drones have a visible serial/ID number painted on them like real airplanes?
No, they are not registered aircraft, they are glorified toys. Really not "drones" by the true definition.
It might be possible to get in a car and follow the drone as it hightails it back to its operators.
No, they have little actual range, so the offenders are likely no more than a few yards away.
I would not confront the men but rather take photos of them so I would have proof of who was responsible.
The operators might then get the idea that you are recording what they are doing to file a law suit -- which you might end up doing.
Oh, you could count on it. But consult a lawyer, no need to get thrown out of court for a 'nuisance suit'.
My inclination, if I got some good pics showing how intrusive it was, would be to go to local media with my pics and get a story going on local TV and in the newspaper. I would then call the county or state attorney to find out if there are any laws on the books to press charges (or encourage the media reporters to do that very thing.. putting more pressure on the system to do something).
It's always good to have a plan.
Seraphim said:Lee
There is no indication of voyeuristic intent on the drone owners. No peeping Tom. There was no trespass - one does own the airspace above ones property. There may have been an invasion of privacy, since the man said he has a six foot privacy fence. It depends on whether or not the fence provided complete privacy.
Whether or not the operator of the drone violated a law, the shooter definitely did. The drone could have come down on the street in front of his home and caused an injury accident, or struck another person. And even though shotguns have more limit effective range, the shotgun blast could have injured another person he didn't know was on the other side of his privacy fence. A single piece of shot, even falling at terminal velocity, could have blinded, caused other serious injury, or even caused a fatality. The shooter was arrogantly stupid. One potential violation of the law doesn't excuse another.
I'm not condoning the drone operator. But I think it's moronic to admire, condone, or emulate such wanton stupidity.
sushidog said:How about using a scanner to find the frequencies the controls operate at and then using your own closer, more powerful transmitter tuned to their frequencies to take control of their drone and bring it down safely? It sounds difficult to me, but I'm sure someone here has the tech savvy to pull off something similar and either jam or override their controls.
Just a thought.
Chip
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