Your Next Allstate Inspector Might Be a Drone 54
New submitter cameronag writes: Following on the heels of EasyJet's plan to inspect planes with drones, insurance giant Allstate has received FAA clearance to test drones for insurance inspections. The company plans to use drones to inspect roofing, weather damage, and collapsed structures, among other things, and says the technology will ultimately speed up claims processing.
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Re: Awesome (Score:4, Funny)
Now they'll claim things are fine and they owe you no Monet
Your insurance company uses Impressionist paintings instead of cash?
Can we stop conflating drone with AI (Score:3, Insightful)
So we'll fly over your town to figure out insurance claims NOT we've programmed an AI to replace hordes of insurance adjusters
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Not sure if joking. Sounded entirely bullshit to me, I checked Wiktionary which actually places it as coming from drone in the sense of a bee which is entirely different in each language.
I know one source isn't enough to conclude bullshit but it was devoid of the sense of superiority that you displayed and my experience is that people who think they're smart are generally idiots.
I don't know if i am an idiot (i may be), and i admit that (between funny and serious) my comment had a spirit of Greek over "barbarians" (i do it all the time in Slashdot!), but i was not joking about the etymology - i can't write the German "treno" word exactly (it's an "e" with a line above!), nor the Greek "thrinos" (Slashdot and unicode are not friends yet!).
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Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
What's the difference between a drone and an Allstate insurance agent?
One's a machine-like contraption utterly devoid of humor and personality, and the other is capable of autonomous flight.
Allstate unit (Score:3)
Will it use the codename "Snake Doctor"
Speed up claims processing? (Score:2)
Just how long does it take to stamp "DENIED" on a claim, and how does a drone make it faster?
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Just how long does it take to stamp "DENIED" on a claim, and how does a drone make it faster?
Doesn't matter.
They'll sugarcoat your rejection with the voice of Dennis Haysbert channeling Barry White,
and you'll cheerfully acquiesce.
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This! In the nearly forty years I've had home owners insurance, I've never had a claim approved.
You need better insurance... :)
I've owned my house about 10 years and had a roof claim, they paid it without complaint and put a new roof on my house. They replaced the gutters as well.
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You don't need a better insurance company, you need a better lawyer.
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Seriously what the fuck is wrong with your insurer?
I've have water damage after a storm over whelmed my gutters repaired, roof damage from a falling tree repaired, smashed windows from hail repaired and water damage after the power shower pump in our roof exploded repaired. Oh and all were separate instances.
Allstate ... Again? (Score:2)
Didn't Allstate show up yesterday with a silly patent?
http://tech.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]
First an overly broad patent (wait until a toilet seat manufacturer patents 'diagnosing- while-enthroned'). Now this.
Thought I don't think there's anything wrong with using a drone for this, as long as inhabitants (i.e. owners and renters) of a covered property have a choice in the matter. But its likely
following cars (Score:3)
Speeds up claims (Score:2)
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No. The sellout will continue until you live in a subsidized trailer. Anything else is injustice and racism.
Insurance companies already use satellites to deal with claims. I know from recent experience that Travelers settles roof damage claims based on satellite imagery in an automated estimate system, and the results are so reliable that contractors take these jobs at face value. The 'adjuster' looks around for 15 minutes, pencil whips the claim and it's over.
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No. No, they don't.
We're light-years away from near-real-time satellite photography for such small purposes as figuring out a single insurance claim, not
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Umm or it could be "I really don't want to climb a ladder to look at your storm damaged roof. I'm going to fly this drone with a gopro attached to have a look"
PFfft. (Score:4, Funny)
Jobs (Score:1)
If you're thinking about being a pilot and flying helicopters for a living, you might want to rethink your investment in your future.
Major corporations want to stop paying for that - and the needed construction/hospital/fire jobs will be stacked with folks that have experience and migrating to that because of losing their jobs to joystick flying 401 bs in India.
We fly drones in the United States that are in Iraq and Afghanistan - Allstate and others will similarly offset all drone flying to other countries.
Moving Further Down the List (Score:2)
The reality (Score:5, Informative)
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I think it could also be highly useful when disasters strike, like a tornado or hurricane taking out a town.
Water (Score:2)
It can, however, be used to go over a community and note which houses have water sitting on the roof...
How about I save you $5000 (Score:2)
And (Score:2)
my next toy might be a shotgun....
Look on the bright side (Score:2)
Well, at least if you hit it the US Code limits your prison sentence to less than 20 years, so you've got that going for you.
Bad Idea (Score:2)
My roof was just replaced a few weeks ago due to hail damage. The initial inspection involved my contractor, and State Farm inspector climbing up there for roughly 30 mins. While a drone might be great for the photos, it's not going to be able to touch things, or hold a discussion, which can be necessary in cases like mine. One of several examples...I have a couple hundred square feet of copper on the front of my home, and that had been oxidized. The inspector initially told us they were paying for a ne
Who's Insurance? (Score:1)
Is it their fault because it is their drone? - or is it your fault because it was your house that they were inspecting?
It seems obvious, but insurance companies seem to have a way to weasel themselves out of anything and assign the blame (and the bill!) to the customer.