From: Live Science
COMMENT - Nesbit's photo is rumored to be hung on a dart board in the R and R area at Green Hills Software.
by Jeff Nesbit
Jeff Nesbit was
the director of public affairs for two prominent federal science
agencies and is a regular contributor to U.S. News & World Report,
where this article first ran before appearing in LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.
The drone wars are coming to America.
While most of us are aware of the lethal Predator drones that target
terrorists outside the United States, not many know that this very same
technology (minus the missiles) is coming to America in a big way to aid
police and homeland security departments operating across the United
States.
And, depending on your perspective, the rapid uptake of drones to track
illegal immigrants at the border, detect drug smuggling or track
criminal activity in high-risk neighborhoods is either a boon to public
safety or a grave risk to privacy.
The reason the use of drones in cities is poised to become widespread
is because Congress has required the Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) to loosen its regulations on the use of unmanned aerial vehicles
(UAVs) and drones for domestic surveillance purposes and allow more
drones in domestic airspace by 2015. [10 Ways the Government Watches You]
Two recent reports highlight this growing tension, which ranges from
concerns that the use of military-style drones in cities could invade
our privacy to the promise that drones and UAVs could represent a
serious, new industry as dozens of companies develop more than 150 new
drone and UAV systems for all sorts of uses in America.
Because there are virtually no hard statistics on the use of drones by
police departments and public safety agencies in cities across the U.S.,
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) launched a nationwide
investigation earlier this month into police use of drones and other
military technologies traditionally used overseas.
And the leading industry group representing companies developing drones
for domestic use, the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems
International (AUVSI), released
a new study earlier this month indicating that the UAV industry may
soon create tens of thousands of new jobs in the U.S. to support the
growth of the industry in cities and states across the country. The
industry is literally exploding, with U.S. sales expected to reach $6
billion annually within a few years.
In addition, the Electric Frontier Foundation (EFF)
— the nonprofit watchdog group that first raised privacy concerns about
the use of drones by police departments — recently released a map that
illustrates dozens of locations and cities where municipalities,
universities, agencies or companies have applied to the FAA to fly UAVs
such as unarmed Predator drones.
EFF filed suit against the FAA a year ago, demanding that the agency
publicly release data on certificates and authorizations the agency had
issued for the operations of drones domestically. The FAA, the sole
federal agency authorizing drone flights in the U.S., initially balked.
But the FAA eventually began to release data on such domestic
authorizations for drone use to EFF — detailing information from 360
such applications — which recently mapped the information online. EFF
also announced a new project, a Drone Census, which it promises to
release this year.
Meanwhile, individual legislators in 33 states introduced bills in just
the past two months to restrict drone use in the name of privacy as an
opening gambit in efforts to limit such use.
While several U.S. cities have abandoned plans for their police
departments to use drones in surveillance activities after such plans
provoked local outcries — for instance, Seattle canceled its drone
program last month even before it got started, after local community
activists caused a ruckus — the most intense scrutiny of drone use in
the United States appears to be the adaptation of Predator drones at
U.S. borders. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) flies nine Predator
drones along the Mexican and Canadian borders to track illegal
immigration and drug smugglers. [Study to Develop Policies for Police Drones]
Because such Predator drones — virtually identical to the drones used
overseas by the military, minus the missiles — can stay in the air for
more than a day at a time and are equipped with incredibly powerful,
high-definition cameras that can identify people and license plates from
miles away, they are ideal for such border surveillance. And, CBP has
been lending out the drones to federal, state and local law-enforcement
agencies with no oversight, EFF has said.
As part of the investigation it announced earlier this month, the ACLU
filed more than 255 public-records requests in 23 states in an effort to
find out the extent of just this sort of drone-lending activity, as
well as the extent to which local police departments are using federally
subsidized military technology and tactics that are more commonly used
overseas.
"Equipping state and local law enforcement with military weapons and
vehicles (such as drones) … to conduct traditional law enforcement
erodes civil liberties and encourages increasingly aggressive policing,
particularly in poor neighborhoods and communities of color," said Kara
Dansky, senior ACLU counsel.
"The American people deserve to know how much our local police are
using military weapons and tactics [such as drones] for everyday
policing," added Allie Bohm, also with the ACLU.
The UAV industry, though, shows no signs of slowing down, even as
groups like the ACLU and EFF raise concerns. As unmanned aircraft are
fully integrated into national airspace over the next three years,
dozens of companies are expected to sell hundreds of drones or systems,
generating tens of thousands of new jobs.
"The economic benefits to the country are enormous," AUVSI said in its
recently released report. "[And] states that create favorable regulatory
and business environments for the industry and the technology will
likely siphon jobs away from states that do not."
In fact, AUVSI said, the economic impact in the U.S. could approach
$100 billion in the next 10 to 15 years as more than 100,000 new jobs
are created to meet the demand for such systems and capabilities. Some
of this will aid the agriculture sector hoping for more precision in the
use of pesticides, with the rest of the growth in the public-safety
sector.
So as groups like the ACLU and EFF fight for greater public scrutiny of
what is clearly an emerging growth industry in America, one thing seems
certain: the drone wars in America are only just beginning.
This article first appeared as Drone Wars in America in the column At the Edge by Jeff Nesbit on U.S. News & World Report. Read Jeff Nesbit's most recent Op-Ed: Marijuana Majority: Americans Now Back Legalization.
The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. (Live Science)
No comments:
Post a Comment