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ARE YOU READY FOR THE GOVERNMENT TO START SURVEILLANCE HERE AT HOME IN THE U.S.?

BIG BAD JOHN R. 2012/07/09 16:19:41
Yes, we need this type of allowing persistent wide-scale surveillance.
No, we do not need this type of allowing persistent wide-scale surveillance in the United States.
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The $90 million Grey Eagle is a descendant of the Predator and manufactured by General Atomics. The aircraft is a medium-range multipurpose UAV that has seen duty in Afghanistan with the Army. In the demonstrations held at the Army’s Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, the MQ-1C was tested with the Ground Based Sense and Avoid (GBSAA) system, a ground-based radar that monitors the UAV and the aircraft around it.

The GBSAA system will be deployed at five bases around the US where Gray Eagle squadrons will be home-based. Fort Hood, Texas will get the first installation, followed by Fort Riley, Kansas. Fort Stewart in Georgia, Fort Campbell in Kentucky, and Fort Bragg in North Carolina will get their GBSAA systems by 2015.

The Army’s announcement comes as the FAA faces a looming deadline to come up with a plan to integrate unmanned aerial vehicles into its regulations for domestic aircraft. Congress put a mandate into the FAA Modernization and Reform Act, signed in February, that requires the FAA to come up with rules for licensing UAVs to fly in the same airspace as human pilots and complete drones' "integration into the national airspace." Rules for certification of the first civilian UAVs, for use by law enforcement and emergency response agencies, were supposed to be in place by May, with the licenses for these "fast-tracked" drones to be issued starting in August.

Privacy advocates with the American Civil Liberties Union and other organizations have expressed concern about the operation of unmanned aerial systems by government agencies. The fear is that they could easily tread on individuals’ privacy by allowing persistent wide-scale surveillance. In part as a response to these concerns, and as part of an effort to give the FAA a helping hand in accelerating UAV licensing, members of the UAV industry published a voluntary "Code of Conduct" for drone operators and manufacturers on July 5. The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International’s guidelines for "safe, non-intrusive operations" define who should fly UAS and under what circumstances—and include a promise to respect individuals’ privacy.

Divided into sections entitled "Safety," "Professionalism" and "Respect," the guidelines take the form of a pledge—"We will" being the first two words of each guideline. For example: "We will ensure UAS will be piloted by individuals who are properly trained and competent to operate the vehicle of its systems." Under the heading of "Respect," the Code of Conduct makes the following pledges:

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Opinions

  • beach bum 2012/07/12 08:37:11
    Yes, we need this type of allowing persistent wide-scale surveillance.
    beach bum
    let them use it at the border between usa and mexico
  • Mikel_mad2002 2012/07/10 10:11:06
    Undecided
    Mikel_mad2002
    Where would it stop?
  • Starman 2012/07/09 21:06:12
    Undecided
    Starman
    Start? Aren't you aware that the Bush administration started monitoring all electronic communications in the US without a warrant years ago.
  • Matt 2012/07/09 18:04:19
    Undecided
    Matt
    Drones might prove useful around the Rio Grande. The could possibly save some border patrol lives. Recently, some college kids proved that they can easily be hacked.

    Hacked
  • sjalan 2012/07/09 16:21:12
    No, we do not need this type of allowing persistent wide-scale surveillance i...
    sjalan
    If used as a boarder patrol enhancement, ok, but for anything else except in the case of a national security problem, ABSOLUTELY NO!!!

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2013/05/21 20:25:53

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