FAA
Releases New Drone List—Is Your Town on the Map?
The Federal Aviation
Administration has finally released a new drone authorization list. This list,
released in response to EFF’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit,
includes law enforcement agencies and universities across the country, and—for
the first time—an Indian tribal agency.
By Jennifer Lynch
EFF
June 15, 2013
EFF
June 15, 2013
View EFF’s updated Map of Domestic Drone Authorizations in a larger
window. (Clicking this link will serve content from Google.)
In all, the list includes more
than 20 new entities over the FAA’s original list, bringing to 81 the total
number of public entities that have applied for FAA drone authorizations
through October 2012.
Some of
these new drone license applicants include:
- The State Department
- National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
- Barona Band
of Mission Indians Risk Management Office (near San Diego, California)
- Canyon
County Sheriff’s Office (Idaho)
- Clackamas
County Sheriff’s Office (Northwest Oregon)
- Grand Forks
Sheriff’s Department (North Dakota)
- King County
Sheriff’s Office (covering Seattle, Washington)
- Medina
County Sheriff’s Office
- Ohio
Department of Transportation
- Sinclair
Community College
- Lorain
County Community College
The list comes amid extensive controversy over a newly-released memo documenting the CIA’s policy on the targeted
killing of American citizens and on the heels of news that Charlottesville,
Virginia has just become one of the first
cities in the country to ban drones. This new list should contribute to the
debate over whether using domestic drones for surveillance is consistent with
the Constitution and with American values.
As we’ve written in the past, drone use in the United States
implicates serious privacy and civil liberties concerns. Although drones can be
used for neutral, or even for positive purposes, drones
are also capable of highly advanced and, in
some cases, almost constant surveillance, and they can amass large amounts
of data. Even the smallest drones can carry a host of surveillance equipment,
from video cameras and thermal imaging to GPS tracking and cellphone
eavesdropping tools. They can also be equipped with advanced forms of radar
detection, license plate cameras, and facial recognition. And, as recent
reporting from PBS and
Slate
shows, surveillance tools, like the military’s development of gigapixel technology
capable of “tracking people and vehicles across an entire city,” are
improving rapidly.
EFF hopes this list will spur more people to ask
their local law enforcement agencies about their drone programs. EFF has
partnered with MuckRock to
make it easier to ask for and disseminate this information. We also encourage
people to ask hard questions of government officials about who is funding drone
development in their communities and what policies the government will demand
agencies follow if they fly drones. We need greater transparency and citizen
push-back to protect Americans from privacy-invasive domestic drone use.
You can find the new list here.
http://intellihub.com/2013/06/15/faa-releases-new-drone-list-is-your-town-on-the-map/
No comments:
Post a Comment