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 commercial drone


The US Must Stop Underestimating Drone Warfare

WIRED

If a major disaster like Fukushima or Chornobyl ever happens again, the world would know almost straight away, thanks to an array of government and DIY radiation-monitoring programs running globally.


Trump admin cuts red tape on commercial drones to compete with China's dominance of the market

FOX News

Retired Charlottesville Fire Chief Charles Werner joins'Fox & Friends First' to discuss drones being used as first responders as Energy Sec. Sean Duffy highlights U.S. drone dominance. Delivery drones could soon take to the skies in full force, following a landmark proposed rule by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The long-anticipated rule is aimed at allowing drones to operate beyond the visual line of sight (BVLOS) -- a move designed to counter China's dominance in unmanned aviation. Currently, operators must obtain individual FAA waivers -- only 657 issued so far -- to fly drones beyond where they can physically see them, hampered by months of delay and bureaucratic setbacks. "Because of that complication, I don't think we saw the innovation that we should have in America," said Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on Tuesday.


Commercial drones used to bomb civilians in Gaza, report says

Al Jazeera

Israeli soldiers have used commercial drones to drop grenades on civilians in Gaza, according to an investigation by Israeli outlets 972 Magazine and Local Call. Soldiers admitted targeting unarmed people, even children, as part of a broader effort to forcibly displace Palestinians from areas in Gaza.


Israel killing Gaza civilians with commercial drones, probe finds

Al Jazeera

The Israeli army is weaponising Chinese-made drones to kill Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip, according to an investigation by the Israeli publications 972 Magazine and the Local Call. The drones are operated manually by soldiers on the ground to bomb civilians – including children – to force them out of their homes or prevent them from returning to areas where Palestinians have been expelled, the outlets reported on Sunday. The publications interviewed seven soldiers and officers to produce their findings, they said. The report was published as criticism of Israel's plan to set up an internment camp in southern Gaza is growing. Former Israeli Prime Ministers Yair Lapid and Ehud Olmert said it would amount to a "concentration camp" if Palestinians there are not allowed to leave. "The weaponisation of civilian drones to kill and dispossess Palestinians is the latest revelation of the cruelties normalised in Gaza and further evidence of how Israel is trying to forcibly transfer the population to the south of the Strip," Al Jazeera's Nour Odeh said, reporting from Amman, Jordan, because Israel has banned Al Jazeera from reporting from Israel and the occupied West Bank.


Intel Officials Warned Police That US Cities Aren't Ready for Hostile Drones

WIRED

The Department of Homeland Security issued warnings to state and local law enforcement agencies this summer regarding the "growing illicit use" of commercial drones, internal documents show. Among the recommended steps was to conduct "exercises to test and prepare response capabilities." A DHS memo from August, which has not been previously reported, paints US cities as woefully underprepared for the "rising" threat of weaponized drones. The capabilities of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) are "progressing faster" than available countermeasures offered under "federal prevention frameworks," the memo says, adding that it's common for state and local authorities to observe "nefarious" and "noncompliant" flights but still lack the authority to intervene. The memo states that violent extremists in the US are increasingly searching for ways to modify "off-the-shelf" drones to ferry dangerous payloads, including "explosives, conductive materials, and chemicals," with major advancements in the area being propelled largely by rampant experimentation on foreign battlefields, including those in Ukraine.


Why China's dominance in commercial drones has become a global security matter

MIT Technology Review

But on June 14, the US House of Representatives passed a bill that would completely ban DJI's drones from being sold in the US. The bill is now being discussed in the Senate as part of the annual defense budget negotiations. While its market dominance has attracted scrutiny for years, it's increasingly clear that DJI's commercial products are so good and affordable they are also being used on active battlefields to scout out the enemy or carry bombs. As the US worries about the potential for conflict between China and Taiwan, the military implications of DJI's commercial drones are becoming a top policy concern. DJI has managed to set the gold standard for commercial drones because it is built on decades of electronic manufacturing prowess and policy support in Shenzhen.


Rise of the slaughterbots: AI drone designed to 'hunt and kill people' is built in just hours by scientists 'for a game'

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Swarms of killer AI drones might sound like the plot of a dystopian science-fiction thriller. But in a terrifying glimpse of the future, one scientist has shown just how easy it already is to build an'assassination drone' that can hunt down and kill people. In just a few hours, Luis Wenus, an engineer and entrepreneur, converted a 115 ( 89.99) drone into the basis of a deadly weapon. Using AI facial recognition the drone was programmed to recognise individuals and race towards them at full speed. Although Mr Wenus says he built the drone'for a game' he also says he wanted to raise awareness for how easily this could be used for a deadly terrorist attack.


'Eyes and ears': Could drones prove decisive in the Ukraine war?

Al Jazeera

Warning: Some readers may find some of the scenes described in this article disturbing. Kyiv, Ukraine – Ivan Ukraintsev, a stern-faced insurance broker turned director of a wartime charity providing crucial aid to Ukraine's military forces, is on a mission: to help Ukraine win the drone war. He is a polite but no-nonsense character, and he is here to talk about drones. "If we [Ukraine] had enough drones, we could end this war in two months," he says firmly. Ivan, who heads up the charity Starlife, had recently returned from overseeing a drone delivery to Bakhmut, a city in eastern Ukraine that has become the focal point for months of bloody battles between Ukrainian and Russian forces. Trench warfare, pockmarked and corpse-ridden swathes of no man's land, and constant artillery bombardments have drawn comparisons to battlefield conditions during World War I.


US puts Chinese drone giant DJI on military ties blacklist

Al Jazeera

The United States Defense Department (DoD) has added more than a dozen Chinese companies, including the world's largest drone manufacturer, to a blacklist of firms with alleged ties to the Chinese military, clearing the way for restrictions on their business. Shenzhen-based DJI Technology, which is estimated to control more than half of the global market for commercial drones, is among the 13 firms added to the blacklist released by the Pentagon on Wednesday. The blacklist grants the US president authority to impose sanctions against companies deemed to have connections to the Chinese military. The announcement comes after the US Treasury Department last year banned US-based persons from trading shares of DJI and seven other Chinese companies over their alleged involvement in the surveillance of ethnic minority Uighurs in China's far-western region of Xinjiang. BGI Genomics Co, a genetic testing company; CRRC Corp, which manufactures rolling stock; and Zhejiang Dahua Technology, a Hangzhou-based surveillance equipment maker, were also added to the updated list.


AUVSI Collaborates with DIU on Cybersecurity Certification Pilot for Commercial Drones

#artificialintelligence

The Association for Uncrewed Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI), the world's leading trade association for uncrewed vehicle systems, has announced a collaboration with the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) to further commercial cyber methodologies to build a shared standard--like the one used to develop the DIU's Blue UAS "Cleared List." AUVSI's effort is designed to expand the number of vetted Uncrewed Aircraft Systems, or UAS, that meet Congressional and federal agency drone security requirements. "The goal of this new pilot initiative is to extend relevant cyber credentialing across the U.S. industrial base, proactively, streamlining and accelerating capabilities available to the Department of Defense (DoD) and the rest of the U.S. government," said Brian Wynne, AUVSI President and CEO. "We are grateful for DIU's partnership and look forward to working with them to make the US drone industry more resilient and secure." AUVSI efforts will streamline the vetting process and further expand the potential small UAS entrants to the government through its Trusted Cyber Program.