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Brad
More efficient than catapults and trebuchets.... Less labor than tunnels.My guess is Google.
Or the Mexican drug cartels are using delivery drones in a test market.
I hate that name too.“Drones”
I vote to shoot a few down then investigate.
As a anti-Amazon person, I consider that Amazon is doing it the most "creepy" possibility.THIS. Not malicious my red round rosy...
It’s doing a grid search. They no doubt have cameras and probably infrared sensors. That’s malicious to those living there, it’s an invasion of privacy, it’s data collection, and it’s just plain creepy. It’s no doubt a private company testing drone technology to sell to the DEA or border patrol. Or some federal agency is already behind it and lying to us.
The other possibility is Google getting more detailed images for Google Earth. Also creepy, like the current images of your house and yard aren’t detailed enough. They’re planning to sell the collected data to advertisers. The drones will photograph your aged roof or tiny deck and you will start getting ads from roof and deck contractors.
Or it’s Amazon testing their drone delivery plans. Mapping the grids to form an address database so the next generation will drop packages by your front door.
Or it’s a terrorist organization testing a biological weapons delivery system.
With the possible exception of Amazon, and crop examination, none of these are good.
At least they are following the law. I suspect a harmless stunt by local enthusiasts. We need a short-range EMP rifle.The drones, estimated to have 6-foot wingspans, have been flying over Phillips and Yuma counties every night for about the past week, Elliott said Monday. Each night, at least 17 drones appear at about 7 o'clock and disappear at about 10 o'clock, staying 200 to 300 feet in the air.
THIS. Not malicious my red round rosy...
It’s doing a grid search. They no doubt have cameras and probably infrared sensors. That’s malicious to those living there, it’s an invasion of privacy, it’s data collection, and it’s just plain creepy. It’s no doubt a private company testing drone technology to sell to the DEA or border patrol. Or some federal agency is already behind it and lying to us.
The other possibility is Google getting more detailed images for Google Earth. Also creepy, like the current images of your house and yard aren’t detailed enough. They’re planning to sell the collected data to advertisers. The drones will photograph your aged roof or tiny deck and you will start getting ads from roof and deck contractors.
Or it’s Amazon testing their drone delivery plans. Mapping the grids to form an address database so the next generation will drop packages by your front door.
Or it’s a terrorist organization testing a biological weapons delivery system.
With the possible exception of Amazon, and crop examination, none of these are good.
Nuke them from space. It's the only way to be sure.At least they are following the law. I suspect a harmless stunt by local enthusiasts. We need a short-range EMP rifle.
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Is the tech built in for swarming? Proximity sensors so they don’t crash into each other, but somehow also controlled so they don’t keep redirecting each other.
Where's Ripley when you need her?Nuke them from space. It's the only way to be sure.
That was actually the first thing I thought of. Seriously.You don't suppose it has anything to do with this?
https://www.faa.gov/news/press_releases/news_story.cfm?newsId=24534
Think about it: the FAA proposes a new rule requiring all drones be identified. To drum up support, they get a company to fly a bunch of "mysterious drones" to get everyone all worked up and say how the new laws are required, "to protect the children", stop the creepy-spying-firestarting-drones, etc. One more freedom is then chipped away.
I joke. Sort of. Yeah, I joke.
I have never understood what it is about a drone that freaks people out so much.
The fact that it can easily violate your privacy, and technically doesn't require a pilot's presence. It's stage one of Skynet meets 1984.
What does pilot presence really have to do with it? A doofus in a Skyhawk covered in cameras and RF devices like cell stingers is just as big of a problem for our society.
To get creepily close, the guy in the Skyhawk has to risk his life.
It's stage one of Skynet meets 1984.
Between always-on surveillance cameras, license plate readers, cell phone tracking, data mining through cookies, charge card transaction records, and a bunch of other stuff, I'm going with stage 27.