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Authored by: nsomos on Tuesday, May 14 2013 @ 12:40 PM EDT |
If someone were spying over my property using a drone,
I would be tempted to first ask them kindly to leave
and never return. (a written message would do)
Should they refuse, I may very well just toss something
in the direction of the drone.
Like a net, or a broom, or an inflatable ball.
If they are under 500 feet during the day, or 1000 feet
at night, they are not in the public airspace, and have
no right to be flying so low.
Part of the court decision referenced by the parent post had ...
"if the landowner is to have full enjoyment of the land,
he must have exclusive control of the immediate reaches
of the enveloping atmosphere."
If their drone run afoul of some 'obstacle' in those immediate reaches
after they have been warned, that is their problem and not mine.
If they are pleasant, I might be willing to give them
back the broken parts. If not, I would be tempted to
advise them to call the cops and explain to the police
exactly how their 'drone' wound up crashing on my property.
Hopefully that should take care of the situation.
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Authored by: albert on Tuesday, May 14 2013 @ 02:30 PM EDT |
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