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FAA Proposes Rules To Limit Commercial Drone Use 119

An anonymous reader sends this report from the NY Times: In an attempt to bring order to increasingly chaotic skies, the Federal Aviation Administration on Sunday proposed long-awaited rules on the commercial use of small drones, requiring operators to be certified, fly only during daylight and keep their aircraft in sight. The rules, though less restrictive than the current ones, appear to prohibit for now the kind of drone delivery services being explored by Amazon, Google and other companies, since the operator or assigned observers must be able to see the drone at all times without binoculars. But company officials believe the line-of-sight requirement could be relaxed in the future to accommodate delivery services.
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FAA Proposes Rules To Limit Commercial Drone Use

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    "If you can see me, I should be able to see you," is a core consequence of free society.

    The operator needing line of sight with the drone is per se much less important than the ability for the drone to be recognised and associated with its operator.

    • The operator needing line of sight with the drone is per se much less important than the ability for the drone to be recognised and associated with its operator.

      These two things have nothing to do with each other, and the FAA has repeatedly mentioned that privacy concerns are not their turf and won't be part of what they do in rule making or enforcement. That's more a local law enforcement matter, and there are already abundant laws on the books dealing with that.

    • And yet that doesnt apply to aircraft or satellites...?

      "If you can see me, I should be able to see you," is a core consequence of free society.

      That sniffs like a made up assertion ;)

  • Amazon employees have become frequently sighted in the Space Needle holding remote controls. Waves of reportings across town have been made of drones carrying lightweight parabolic solar reflectors that can be seen by the unaided eye dozens of miles away....

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Come to think of it, even a green pen laser kept aimed at the operator at all times would provide naked-eye visibility to a couple dozen miles out, barring obstructions or inclement weather.

      • The problem is then orientation, is the craft moving parallel to you or flying toward or away from you?

        I have flown RC tons in the last 30 years, and I can tell you orientation can be a bitch.

        My take is the latest is a way for them to weasel out of providing clear regulation.

        What you will get is the same thing that's always happened, those wishing to use them commercially will follow guidelines and use them accordingly those not will ignore regs and keep using them how they always have been.

        We will stil
    • Not Amazon employees but independent contractors. And if they get busted / fined / crash the drone / have it in-pounded / etc they have to pay for it + the package.

  • Isn't this what the rules say now? How does this differ from what is already in place?

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      Ahh, ScentCone [slashdot.org] posted the answer. Prior to these laws, all commercial drone use was prohibited. Wow... how silly...

      • Prior to these laws, all commercial drone use was prohibited.

        And still will be for at least a couple of years while this regulatory wagon rolls slowly down the road. Meanwhile, developed countries around the world are getting their shit together, and seeing immediate economic benefits from work in this area.

        Right now, if you want to do sUAS aerial work for pay, you have to do an incredibly onerous federal dance in filing for a 333 exception, and have to have at least a Private Pilot's License. That's right, you're flying a tiny little DJI quadcopter with GoPro o

        • by emj ( 15659 )

          Thanks, Obama administration.

          I know you are bitter and ranting, but really, calm down please.

          • I know you are bitter and ranting, but really, calm down please.

            So, which part is a rant? Specifically?

            Am I confused about who Huerta's boss is?

            Am I confused about the words written in the proposed rules, and the disparate impact they would have on a scenario exactly like the one I described?

            Or are you simply in ad hominem defend-the-administration mode, and carefully avoiding any actual comment on the substance of the matter because you're the one who's bitter and ranty about the reality of it?

            • So, which part is a rant? Specifically?

              Because you dared speak ill of the "Chosen One".

              Please report to Room 101 for re-education.

            • the part where you rant on about the scary black man being so scary is the rant son. remember, dog whistles don't work around grownups that have heard them before.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Schools in my area charge around $7,000 for a private pilot license package deal. They are far from the cheapest in the nation. The minimum required flight time for a PPL is 40 hours, with 20 hours instruction. The average time is around 70 hours. Not hundreds. You need to pass one medical exam, which is fairly basic. And the DHS does the background check (once), there's not much you need to do.

          If you think these rules have anything to do with who is in the White House, you have no clue about the FAA and ho

          • If you think these rules have anything to do with who is in the White House, you have no clue about the FAA and how it operates.

            Huerta, a political appointee, is 100% in charge of the agenda here. He's the one that has decided to ignore the congressional requirement on the timing of this, and the one who is tap-dancing around the the issues that people raise when addressing the oddly capricious lines being drawn.

            You many think the average farmer who wants to fly a cheap quadcopter over his bean field to look for dry spots is going to be able to start from scratch and get a PPL in 60 hours (never going to happen) and that there i

        • The guy running the roofing business, though? He'll have to wait a couple of years or become a pilot and an expert on navigating section 333's paperwork mill

          Or he'll just do it. The FAA doesn't have the manpower to catch him... and even if they do catch him once, the fine is $10,000 and thus lots cheaper than doing it legally.

        • Is there another administration that would handle this in a way you think better? This is the exact process I'd expect. If Obama were holding anything up, the relaxed rules wouldn't be anywhere close to passing. All you can say is that he hasn't expedited the process, and it isn't clear to me that another President would. Your "Thank you, Obama:" probably should be "Thank you, FAA" or "Thank you, bureaucracy".

  • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @09:25AM (#49065953)
    The FAA's current position is that ALL (with very, very few waivered exceptions) commercial use of UAS is not allowed. Their proposed new rules would reduce their restrictions, not add to them. You can't get more restricted than "completely banned." But don't get your hopes up. It will take two or three years before these proposed rules, or some variation on them, actually take effect. In the meantime, thousands of small businesses, farmers, etc., will continue to just operate on the down-low and risk large fines.

    Especially ridiculous, of course, is that people flying the exact same machines, in exactly the same place, at exactly the same time, with all of the exact same safety precautions and practices, but who are doing it for recreational purposes, will not be beholden to the same rules. Flying after the sun goes down? Just fine if you're an enthusiast. Making exactly the same flight, but getting $50 to do it? Federal fine!

    Another capricious, irrational regulatory stance on the part of the executive branch. The new rules, if and when they ever stick, despite congress requiring them, by law, to have it done by September (it will never happen), will have zero impact on a reckless amateur noob or someone malicious. This is just a fee grab looking to feed the FAA with $150 every 24 months from some guy who does roofing and wants to inspect gutters without putting up a dangerous ladder. Right now he's not allowed. Someday he will be able to, if he pays more money to do so. But his neighbor can do it for fun with no legal risks. Absurd.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Welcome to 21st century America, Citizen. Hope your freedom was worth the security.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Big deal, you can fly a small plane with friends and have no problem. Fly them for $50 and you can get fined if you do t have a commercial transport license.

      • Big deal, you can fly a small plane with friends and have no problem. Fly them for $50 and you can get fined if you do t have a commercial transport license.

        So out of curiosity, how do you justify that distinction? What is it about the $50 that makes the pilot suddenly less safe? Specifically.

        • So out of curiosity, how do you justify that distinction? What is it about the $50 that makes the pilot suddenly less safe? Specifically.

          The government isn't getting their cut, which means the pilot will soon be surrounded by men with guns. That's what makes them suddenly less safe.

        • by asylumx ( 881307 )
          It's not about the $50, it's about the fact that you're working "for hire" as as such are required to have a specific level of training and upkeep. Similar to going to your friends house for dinner vs. your friend opening a restaurant from their home. The latter requires periodic health inspections, for example.
          • by asylumx ( 881307 )
            BTW when your buddy flies with you, they can split the cost with you -- as long as they are flying with you and they are not commissioning the flight itself.
        • by otter42 ( 190544 )

          It's really simple. Past experience has shown that pilots do stupid things for money. We take risks we shouldn't when our paycheck is on the line. It used to be that I didn't need a commercial license to fly for money, but after seeing too many people get injured and die because of risky behavior (weather, fuel, maintenance, etc...) the FAA saw that regulations about commercial flight were necessary.

          Imagine there's a blizzard outside. Think about your motivations to drive yourself to a friend's house, vs. y

  • how will the drones be able to fly through my pet door to deliver my bag of potato chips directly to my couch?

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      how will the drones be able to fly through my pet door to deliver my bag of potato chips directly to my couch?

      Oh, that is easily answered!

      Step 1. Start with the pool of tech workers who have been displaced by the oversubscription of H1-B visa workers (The Pacific NW will be a great place to start!)

      Step 2. Sign them up with brand new car ride-share service Druber (Drones R our Uber!) (that is, all the ones who own cars, and not those hipsters who eschew the Modern American Car)

      Step 3. Using a new social networking App (DroneDrivers!), they check in at the automated, drone based delivery service's warehouse. (Let's c

  • by Dereck1701 ( 1922824 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @09:42AM (#49066033)

    "keep their aircraft in sight"

    So they're basically negating the one major aspect of a drone, the ability to fly significant areas autonomously by tethering it to someone on the ground. Sounds like bureaucratic red tape to me, if you can't kill a thing make it useless to do it by wrapping it in so many "common sense" measures as to make it useless. I can understand some things, requiring insurance, constant tracking, keeping records, but maintaning line of sight either shows a complete lack of understanding of what a drone is or a blatant attempt to kill a (possibly) nascent industry.

    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @10:09AM (#49066221) Journal
      A lot of cases where drones are being used commercially (aerial photography / site surveys / inspection of industrial installations) can still be done within the line-of-sight restriction. Because the operator still enjoys the other major aspects of drones: stable flight characteristics, and a telemetry+video downlink. I'm not a ig fan of regulations, but in this case I understand why they take a conservative stance for now.
    • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @10:12AM (#49066235) Homepage Journal

      These are safety rules people Keeping the aircraft in sight means and having the ability to have the operator take control is actually a good rule. It should help keep down injuries and property damage. Remember this is for a vehicle of up to 50lbs. A 50lbs vehicle moving at say 80 mph can do a lot of damage.
      And before anyone says it this is for all remote control aircraft and not just quadcopters! I have seen fixed wing RC aircraft moving a lot faster than 80mph.

      These rules will allow for things like aerial photography for movies, news, and real estate, also for a lot of AG uses and other inspection tasks.
      Nope these are good rules to start with and in a few years maybe opened up.
      The last thing anyone wants is for a 50lbs drone to crash into a school bus full of Nuns taking orphans to a Christmas party and having it crash into an animal shelter killing all the kids, nuns, and puppies.

    • Can you promise the drone, out of your site, will not run into another aircraft, person or building?

      For experimental situations over known terrain maybe autonomous drones will work fine. For commercial operations in situations where other aircraft may be operating (IE EMS helicopters, AG aircraft, other drones, etc), the drone needs to operate under the same rules as the manned aircraft they are in the vicinity of. Manned aircraft have to see and avoid other aircraft. It doesn't always work, but certainly

      • Nothing is guaranteed. But just because a remotely operated vehicle is out of physical sight doesn't mean it is out of control. First off they shouldn't be operating anywhere near aircraft, drone flight should be restricted below 500' (planes, jets and helicopters are supposed to remain above this altitude), above 300' unless they have the permission of the land owner to fly lower and nowhere near airports. And no one in their right mind is saying that these things should be allowed to fly about unmonito

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      So they're basically negating the one major aspect of a drone, the ability to fly significant areas autonomously by tethering it to someone on the ground. Sounds like bureaucratic red tape to me, if you can't kill a thing make it useless to do it by wrapping it in so many "common sense" measures as to make it useless. I can understand some things, requiring insurance, constant tracking, keeping records, but maintaning line of sight either shows a complete lack of understanding of what a drone is or a blatan

  • Commercials (Score:5, Funny)

    by penguinoid ( 724646 ) on Monday February 16, 2015 @09:43AM (#49066045) Homepage Journal

    FAA Proposes Rules To Limit Commercial Drone Use

    I've always thought commercials drone on and on. Glad to see the FCC is doing something about this.

  • ...be paid to landowners for easements? We've already been sold down the river when it comes to commercial aircraft and radio waves that pass over our property. Personally, I think the line should be drawn here. You want to fly a drone a few feet over my house, you pay.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Yeah, and you should get money for every satellite that passes over you too!

      First off, nobody is talking about flying "a few feet over your house". Unless you just ordered something, wherein one would presume that you're giving the drone permission to come to your house.

      Secondly, you purchased a piece of ground. Not a cylinder of area reaching from the Earth's core up to the edge of the known universe. You have rights in the immediate vicinity of your house, but not far above it. As it should be.

  • In an attempt to bring order to increasingly chaotic skies, the Federal Aviation Administration on Sunday proposed long-awaited rules on the commercial use of small drones, requiring operators to be certified, fly only during daylight and keep their aircraft in sight.

    So if we add an external camera on a stick, pointed toward the drone, does that count? /duck

  • The no night flying restriction is incredibly myopic when it comes to search & rescue operations. As an 8-year veteran of SAR ops, I can tell you that most searches start at night. Why? Because it's only after it gets dark that the reporting party decides that they need help. We never ever delay an initial response for daylight hours. Low-cost FLIR cameras are starting to become available. And I'm certainly not going to submit a flight plan 24 hours in advance. 87% of all searches are resolved

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      It would be great if you could find someone who would pledge to pay your legal bills if the FAA sues you, and then launch anyway and hopefully use it to save someone's life. The publicity such a case would bring would do wonders for improving drone regulations.

  • I envisage a helicopter load of UAV operators in "line of sight".

    For the helicopter providers, it is a great opportunity.

    For the LOS UAV operators, it is a wonderful range extension.

    For the rest of us, underneath, maybe not so great.
    --
    Most people are not nearly as paranoid as they should be.

  • Posing politicians are part of the process, no doubt. To what extent the model we learned about in school exists, or whether it ever existed, is not terribly relevant. There is a belief about the US government that many Americans share. Here goes ...

    Fundamentally, complaints should go through the judicial branch; if they are serious and lingering enough, legislators write laws to address the issue; and finally, the executive branch is supposed to enforce the laws.

    When the executive branch circumvents the co

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