this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2023
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Privacy
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So this means I'm allowed to fly my drone over prison yards then, right?
Edit: Also, doesn't that then make it legal for folks to capture the drones? It's on their property.
Wait, we don't own our property airspace? So then, and I'm not being facetious, the entire plot of the 2010 film Burlesque is complete bullshit?
I figured a drone over a prison was a no and I was just being humorous but the citizen's lack of property airspace sucks. I get it for like a mile above your house because of planes, but drone height? That's stupid.
What if the drone touches the ground or a surface that connects to the ground like a rooftop? Is it fair game then?
Pretty sure you own ~100 feet above, 20 feet below and nothing further. If the police stay above a hundred feet then there’s no legal recourse for their spying. And now I’m going to read the article to learn why they’re spying on peoples’ 9/11 parties.
Edit: “an annual Caribbean festival marking the end of slavery that brings thousands of revelers”
My best guess is simply that it's Labor Day weekend. People party a decent bit over it. And when people party, there's a chance for cops to make some money, I mean arrests for dangerous dangerous crimes against society.
I ninja’d you. It’s black people. They deployed drones because of black people. If police weren’t so eager to fit their stereotype, this would almost be unexpected.
There is an expectation of privacy in the United States, and currently drones are in a legal grey area where case law hasn't really been established yet.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expectation_of_privacy_(United_States)
This is why the the ACLU recommends the following safeguards:
Edit: formatting