San Francisco Chronicle

Drone maker urges ID push

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The world’s largest manufactur­er of civilian drones is proposing that the craft continuall­y transmit identifica­tion informatio­n to help security agencies and law enforcemen­t figure out which might belong to rogue operators.

DJI, a Chinese company, said in a paper released Monday that radio transmissi­ons of an identifica­tion code, possibly the operator’s Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s registrati­on number, could help allay security concerns while protecting privacy. The paper suggests steps that can be taken to use existing technologi­es to develop an identifica­tion system, and that operators could include more identifica­tion informatio­n in addition to a number if they wish.

Anyone with the proper radio receiver could obtain those transmissi­ons from the drone, but only law enforcemen­t officials or aviation regulators would be able to use that registrati­on number to identify the registered owner.

Law enforcemen­t agencies and the U.S. military raised security concerns last year after FAA officials proposed permitting more civilian drone flights over densely populated areas.

In response, the FAA announced in January that it was delaying a public notice of the proposal while the agency works to address the concerns. On Monday, FAA Administra­tor Michael Huerta kicked off a three-day drone symposium in suburban Washington by announcing that the agency is forming an advisory committee to make recommenda­tions on how to remotely track drones, as well as trying to facilitate a dialogue between government agencies and the drone industry on how best to address security concerns.

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