Stanford CIS

DOJ calls for drone privacy policy 7 years after FBI’s first drone launched

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"“The main difference is that UAS will drive down the cost of aerial surveillance quite radically, as well as permit smaller and more invasive and longer flying, or even persistent, aerial platforms for surveillance,” Peter Asaro, a drone expert and professor of media studies at the New School, told Ars. "

"“At some point, the practical barriers become so low that not even new law enforcement policies are enough,” Ryan Calo, a law professor who specializes in robotics law at the University of Washington School of Law, told Ars."

Published in: Press , Drones , Privacy , Robotics