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German Railways To Test Anti-Graffiti Drones 208

garymortimer writes "Germany's national railway company, Deutsche Bahn, plans to test small drones to try to reduce the amount of graffiti being sprayed on its property. The idea is to use airborne infra-red cameras to collect evidence, which could then be used to prosecute vandals who deface property at night. A company spokesman said drones would be tested at rail depots soon."
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German Railways To Test Anti-Graffiti Drones

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 27, 2013 @01:32PM (#43833887)

    At first glance I was extremely excited to hear about anti-gravity trains, but then my joy was quickly destroyed by graffiti.

    • I think they all called Maglev

    • EXACTLY what happened to me - for 1/10 of a second I thought I was reading about anti-GRAVITY in trains. Then I suddenly remembered which lousy century I was born into and it all fell apart even before the part of my brain responsible for reading comprehension could finish its job.

      • Then I suddenly remembered which lousy century I was born into

        Well, and I read this sentence of yours as "which lousy country" and thought that you were a compaining German DB customer. :-) (BTW, I've also read it as anti-gravity. I guess I need new glasses! I've heard Google started making some nice ones...)

        • by fisted ( 2295862 )
          > compaining
          You Fucking Name It.

          Can't wait for the first of those drones to be properly bombed.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      As a loyal customer of Deutsche Bahn, I would just like to say: The paint jobs on the trains are as boring as snot, please pay graffiti artists to liven them up.
  • by daniel.garcia.romero ( 2755603 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @01:36PM (#43833905)
    "Germany's national railway company, Deutsche Bahn, plans to test small drones to try to reduce the theft of small drones introduced earlier. The idea is to use airborne infra-red cameras to collect evidence, which could then be used to prosecute vandals who steal property at night. A company spokesman said drones would be tested at rail depots soon."
  • Anti-gravity (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Koyaanisqatsi ( 581196 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @01:39PM (#43833927)

    Raise your hand if you read that too.

    Paint me disappointed :(

    • Saw it... not entirely sure if it was intentional, or not... vaguely reading the comments to see how many people are commenting on anti-gravity without reading the summary.
    • I raise your hand (if only to keep your Life Ouf of Balance).
    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      "Anti-gravity."

      The opposite of gravity is comedy.
  • If America was involved, our drones would "fix" the graffiti with a Hellfire missile. I like the German solution better.

    Ironic that 60 years later, we're more inclined to use killer flying robots to assassinate our enemies than are the Germans.

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @02:14PM (#43834139)
      I like the American solution better. Its been shown to reduce recidivism.
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      this is what I was thinking. Put Rand Paul in charge of it and blow the kids with spray paint away, don't care if a cop or drone does it.
    • by mianne ( 965568 )
      We could reach a happy medium... Why not arm the drones with solvents and/or paint sprayers... They can immediately remove or paint over any exterior graffiti, which would destroy the appeal of tagging in the first place. Bonus.. they can tag the perpetrators too facilitating their identification, arrest, and conviction.
  • Simply turning off the fucking floodlights wouldn't just save DB a fortune on juice, it makes vandal highly visible. You can't tag if you can't see; any light is a give-away. But since DB can count on continued tax money and political support -- and because no bureaucrat or middle manager ever got ahead by reducing waste or head count -- they'll spearhead the use of drones. The justice ministry and police will follow.
    • Or they could just use dogs, or security guards, or coat the carriages in something that resists spray paint.
    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      Simply turning off the fucking floodlights wouldn't just save DB a fortune on juice, it makes vandal highly visible. You can't tag if you can't see; any light is a give-away.

      As well as obvious to cameras. Yet the idea that lighting things up "deters crime" continues to exist.
  • by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @02:06PM (#43834089)

    We can stop essentially all crime, or at least prosecute it after it happens by installing surveillance everywhere. We need to decide where we are willing to use this technology. This particular application seems pretty harmless - as long as the railway companies don't decide that now that they have the drones they might as well monitor employee efficiency.....

    • different concept from this article, a company policing its own property with surveillance system. no different from you or I doing it for our business or home. police can subpoena for records.

    • If shareholders could build a drone to track their companies CEO and other officers and make sure they are getting an honest day's work for their pay, I'm all for it.

      The ROI for tracking thousands of minimum wage grunts around to save a few pennies isn't worth it. One drone to keep an eye on $5 million a year? It could pay off.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      We can stop essentially all crime, or at least prosecute it after it happens by installing surveillance everywhere

      Well I suppose one could you take a look at the UK and their surveillance everywhere idea and how it's not doing squat for reducing crime rates. Rather with fewer bodies on the ground, criminals know exactly when and where to hit because of how long it takes police to respond. And how to foil the system as well.

      Really if they wanted to reduce graffiti, they'd have people on the ground doing patrols. It works, even if it's random. They don't need to be peace officers, or the german equivalent but rather

    • by Hentes ( 2461350 )

      The German railway unions wouldn't be happy with that.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Hentes ( 2461350 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @02:19PM (#43834167)

    and give the vandals a taste of their own medicine.

    • This is actually a seriously great idea!

      Create some kind of Gatling paint gun firing 500-1000 paint balls a minute at very high velocity and use that. Any vandals hit would be knocked down and completely covered in paint. Even if he got up and away, he'll be easy to find due to the extreme amount of paint on him. Use a paint that easily removable from the trains but hard to remove from skin and clothing. Now that's a taste of their own medicine!

  • When I was in Germany in the late 80s I remember seeing a big Hamburg apartment complex covered in graffiti. Seems they still have them: Graffiti Apartment Building – Berlin, Germany | sketchy.com [sketchy.com], just one of many examples you can find. But apparently it isn't enough to keep vandalism from occurring.

  • They should fix their trains and tracks so the trains are no longer later that often. Since they started becoming a privatized company, they raised prices and lowered service quality. They let the infrastructure rot and the new infrastructure they build is crumbling after five years.

    Maybe they should send armed drones after the management.

    BTW: The former CEO of the German railway is now in charge of the not yet completed new airport Berlin-Brandenburg. ;-)

    • by Archon-X ( 264195 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @06:01PM (#43835817)

      You realise that often times train delays are caused by graffiti?

      The London Tube essentially killed graffiti by refusing to run any trains with any graffiti at all - panels or throwups.

      Obviously, this leads directly to delays.
      Furthermore, if the company is dropping 10M on cleaning per year, that's 10M on maintenance that it's (presumably) not spending..

  • It's only a matter of time now before someone mounts a stencil and a servo actuated sprayer on a quadcopter and starts putting graffiti in places that are difficult to reach!

  • Couldn't you just use cameras? What possible advantage do expensive flying drones have?

    • Couldn't you just use cameras? What possible advantage do expensive flying drones have?

      Perhaps it's cheaper to deploy a few drones randomly, than to mount cameras all over the place? Suppose you have a thousand places that are graffiti targets. That would require a thousand cameras at, say $1000/pop to deploy (assuming a single camera can take in the entire target). That's a million dollars. For that kind of money you can get drones that will patrol those places, covering nooks and crannies that a fixed camera couldn't, and you have the added benefits of being able to follow the perpetrat

  • ...in 3...2...1...

    I can imagine them dragging wide ribbons with guerrilla art across the public space.

  • Why not regular surveillance cameras? Why should it be air borne?
  • by TuringCheck ( 1989202 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @03:23PM (#43834709)
    Next move is to install some of the "other" Rheinmetall products on the drones and the grafitti problem will be solved fully automatically >:->
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Next move is to install some of the "other" Rheinmetall products on the drones and the grafitti problem will be solved fully automatically >:->

      Me thinks the smallest Rheinmetal products would be far to heavy for small drones. Maybe you were thinking of Gloch.

  • by BlackPignouf ( 1017012 ) on Monday May 27, 2013 @04:53PM (#43835375)

    Sorry, but WTF Deutsche Bahn???
    There have been 3 trains that derailed in Stuttgart last year, and one runaway train that luckily didn't kill anybody because it happened at 4am.
    Stuttgart is the city that gave you Mercedes Benz, Bosch and Porsche.
    They seriously have better things to do than to care about graffitis.

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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