Get the latest tech news

DJI will no longer stop drones from flying over airports, wildfires, and the White House


DJI claims the decision “aligns” with the FAA’s rules.

But it turns out the DJI drone that damaged a Super Scooper airplane fighting the Los Angeles wildfires was a sub-250-gram model that may not require Remote ID to operate, and the FBI expects it will have to “work backwards through investigative means” to figure out who flew it there. 1) Can you confirm that DJI no longer prevents its drones from taking off / flying into any locations whatsoever in the United States, including but not limited to military installations, over public emergency areas like wildfires, and critical government buildings like the White House? The geofencing system that was in place prior was a voluntary safety measure introduced by DJI over 10 years ago when mass-produced small drones were a new entrant to the airspace, and regulators needed time to establish rules for their safe use.

Get the Android app

Or read this on The Verge

Read more on:

Photo of White House

White House

Photo of Drones

Drones

Photo of DJI

DJI

Related news:

News photo

China's DJI, World's largest drone manufacturer, no longer blocks flights over airport and military bases

News photo

DJI Flip compact drone has one-tap flight modes and 4K video

News photo

DJI's Flip combines the best of its lightweight drones for $439