Summary

Chinese drone company DJI has removed its geofencing feature that automatically restricted drone flights over sensitive areas, like airports, wildfires, and government buildings, replacing it with dismissible warnings.

The decision follows growing distrust in Chinese-made drones and U.S. regulatory changes.

DJI argues this empowers operators while aligning with global standards, but critics worry it could endanger safety, particularly for unaware pilots.

Previously, geofencing helped prevent incidents, like a DJI drone crash at the White House in 2015.

  • @SpruceBringsteen
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    94 hours ago

    While this is a bad move on DJI’s part, maybe it will also force some changes to drone related security.

    Fencing on just the user end only protects against Uncle Bob and his ignorance, not someone actually ill intentioned.

    • @glimse
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      33 hours ago

      The drones a terrorist would use to attack a government building doesn’t even have GPS. They’d build racing drones, not use an off-the-shelf camera drone

      • @SpruceBringsteen
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        32 hours ago

        Exactly what I’m saying.

        Geo fencing is only one layer of defense. It’s necessary and useful to some degree, but it should be a part of a whole system. It’s place in the system is literally that of a fence.

        The most sensitive places are going to need some active form of defense. There are fiber optic drones, good luck even trying to scramble them.

        I just hope one of the layers is falcons.

        • @glimse
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          21 hour ago

          Yep! That said, that drone flying into a plane over the wildfires is a pretty great example of why geofencing SHOULD exist. You don’t have to have malicious intent to cause destruction…I can see someone’s drone getting sucked into an engine while they’re trying to get an amazing shot of a plane taking off