Municipal, state, and federal regulations have a significant impact not only how and where drones can be used but on how the drone industry evolves.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Tuesday issued itsfirst formal rulesfor commercial drone use, making it easier to deploy drones for uses such asutility inspectionsor agriculture. Previously, drone operations requiredspecial FAA permission. The regulations, however, include limitations -- suc...
Drone FAA Regulations About Drones Droneshave gained in tremendous popularity over the past few years. The official name for a drone is UAV or unmanned aerial vehicle, and is defined, as it's name implies, as an aircraft without a human pilot aboard. Drones are either piloted from the groun...
Drones have been growing in popularity and while hobbyist are permitted to fly (UAS) Unmanned Aircraft Systems under certain restrictions, commercial operators have largely been grounded. These rules and regulations will eventually change all of that. Make no mistake about it there is a lot of mo...
dronesunmanned aerial vehiclesUAVsremotely controlled aircraftFederal Aviation AdministrationFAAadministrative regulationaviationmodel aircraftgeofencingA rapidly growing commercial drone industry has prompted the introduction of numerous regulations governing American airspace. Congress has tasked the Federal ACa...
At the moment, there are no standard set of rules that can be applied across the world for drones — though many countries have individual rules and regulations in place. Welsh explained that many countries conduct risk-based assessments of drones that are time-consuming, labor-intensive and req...
This time for public comments will be open until March 15, 2019. After that, any comments made will be reviewed to determine any changes. You can submit comments athttp://www.regulations.govand search for “RIN 2120Al32” You don’t need a new registration ID with this new rule, you ...
There will be a 60-day window for the public to comment on the proposed regulation. The FAA is supposed to have regulations for drones in place by September 2015, though the agency isnot expected to meet that deadline. It may takemore than a year before final rules are in ...
Deadly Drones? Why FAA Regulations Miss the Mark on Drone Safety Stanford Technology Law ReviewCalandrillo, SteveOh, JasonWebb, Ari
The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) haspublishedfinal rules forPart 107 drone operations(drones used for commercial work). The rules specify the need for Remote ID and also loosen the rules around flying over people at night. ...