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Since we, or Californians technically, are already at this point, ALL Phantom pilots need to work to educate their govt.
If California passes this law it will be tested in court and most likely shot down (pun intended). AGREE. If you wish to spend your time in court appearances and your $... go with God.Harassing will need to be defined, but if we just go with common courtesy I agree with you. I think hovering a drone over someone's backyard is annoying to say the least, but the reality is that there is no law that can trump federal law. Feelings do not count.
If California passes this law it will be tested in court and most likely shot down (pun intended). When outside or in public, you have no right to privacy. Of course this saying was created to support the government's surveillance programs, but it applies to the public as well. Can't have it one way.
Great example! Thats the typical BS that the media loves to run with. Unfortunately, that's NEVER been documented as actually happening. There has NEVER been any legal action taking on that kind of behavior. Only false claims of assumed breach of privacy.Couldn't be more wrong. The term "harassment" is codified in hundreds of laws.
PS- please give me your address and the date of your next backyard party. I'm sure buzzing your guests and kids with my quad will be welcome.
AGREE. Let's keep the madness in CA.Since we, or Californians technically, are already at this point, ALL Phantom pilots need to work to educate their govt.
When outside or in public, you have no right to privacy... correct.
In my backyard with a 6 foot fence? incorrect. But once again you are hung up on the law and "your rights" rather than common courtesy...and that is what's turning public opinion against UAVs.
Thats the key.. I WILL fly over your property. But doing that doesn't make it unsafe, nor does it imply an intent to violate your privacy! I can fly over your house in a real helicopter and wouldn't think anything about it beyond the noise. So why the, again, artificial assumption that I'm doing it to look at your yard? Do you REALLY think you're that important?I wouldn't fly over your backyard on purpose,
Thats the key.. I WILL fly over your property. But doing that doesn't make it unsafe, nor does it imply an intent to violate your privacy! I can fly over your house in a real helicopter and wouldn't think anything about it beyond the noise. So why the, again, artificial assumption that I'm doing it to look at your yard? Do you REALLY think you're that important?
your attitude is very common, thus anti-drone laws are becoming common. You are sooo missing the point. I give up.Thats the key.. I WILL fly over your property. But doing that doesn't make it unsafe, nor does it imply an intent to violate your privacy! I can fly over your house in a real helicopter and wouldn't think anything about it beyond the noise. So why the, again, artificial assumption that I'm doing it to look at your yard? Do you REALLY think you're that important?
You, sir, are respectful and considerate and a credit to your fellow fliers. A rarity. Kudos. If every quad flyer would adopt your attitude, we'd see less complaints and less whining for laws.Seems that you could keep it above the streets on the way to you flying grounds. I have a large open area near my house and prefer to take off from my backyard. I do acend to 200 feet and keep it over the streets on the way to the open ground. At that altitude the quad is much less disturbing than the Bikes and trucks with loud exhaust systems. I could fly directly over my neighbors homes but why? I rather be in good standing folks and be able to show them in the flight logs that I am being respectful of their property.
your attitude is very common, thus anti-drone laws are becoming common. You are sooo missing the point. I give up.
I think @III% Streve is making a valid point. The right to passage is afforded to other civil aviation. Why not drones?
Furthermore, the assumption of privacy invasion is very real. People immediately assume your only purpose is to invade privacy and spy on your neighbors. I still don't know of any cases where that has actually happened.
BTW, I've deleted some posts that were not productive. Let's keep it polite.
In that case you'd be in violation of the proposed law. Is your post an attempt to show that you'd be flying lawfully?Seems that you could keep it above the streets on the way to you flying grounds. I have a large open area near my house and prefer to take off from my backyard. I do acend to 200 feet and keep it over the streets on the way to the open ground. At that altitude the quad is much less disturbing than the Bikes and trucks with loud exhaust systems. I could fly directly over my neighbors homes but why? I rather be in good standing folks and be able to show them in the flight logs that I am being respectful of their property.
We are in agreement. We have enough knuckleheads flying over people's houses. Don't want the Ca. solution in my state, either.I see civilian and tour operated helis over my property all the time. One of the very few downsides of living near the Hollywood sign. We tolerate it although we have been pushing for legislation to curb it.
Similarly, I don't want to see a swarm of drones over my property either. But SB142 is not the answer. It's obtuse. 350ft is absurd. Not to mentioned dangerous considering the number of helis around here flying below 500ft regularly and most for no reason.
There needs to be a sensible middle ground. Maybe it's 200ft. Maybe 150ft. The height is less important than the intention. Any law should allow for two things to coexist as much as is possible:
As with many things, the devil is in the details. The expectation of privacy is within reason.
- Quiet and reasonable expectation of privacy on your property.
- The ability for a drone to transit the airspace above your property.
If you're sunbathing nude, GA traffic can and probably will see you (at least they will in SoCal). If that GA traffic simply carries on it's merry way, no harm, no foul. Even if they got to see your boobies! If they descend and circle or otherwise linger, that's no bueno. Similarly, if they took a picture with a zoom lens and sold it to TMZ, that's also no bueno.
The same should apply to drones. And since the FAA insists drones are aircraft, let's keep it consistent and use the same local ordinances that already in place to protect people's privacy from helicopters and planes.
SB142 is unnecessary.
SB142 is in conflict with existing FAA regs for civil aviation.
SB142 is dangerous.
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