Lodi News-Sentinel

What if a drone falls on your head?

- By Samantha Masunaga

Imagine you’re standing in your front yard when a drone flies overheard, delivering a package to one of your neighbors.

The drone goes over your house, flying much lower than a helicopter could. Would that be considered trespassin­g? After all, you didn’t even order the package. What if the drone took pictures of you and everything else in your yard as it went by; is that allowed? What if it malfunctio­ned and fell on your head — who would be at fault?

These are some of the thorny legal questions that will have to be answered as companies such as Google parent Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and UPS Inc. start preparing for a future where delivery by drone is more widespread.

Last week, Alphabet subsidiary Wing became the first company to operate a commercial drone delivery service in the United States: It ferried tissues, bottled water, cough drops and other products to people in Christians­burg, Va. Christians­burg is small — it has only about 21,000 residents — and Wing’s delivery service is only for the last mile of a package’s journey, but there are plans for more coverage in the future.

Wing isn’t the only company interested. This month, UPS got permission from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to operate delivery drones at university, hospital and corporate campuses. Amazon, meanwhile, has long been working on its own robotic delivery service, and this summer it unveiled a new drone that it said was optimized for courier work.

But technology is only part of the puzzle. There are still questions about how drone delivery systems will navigate privacy and trespassin­g issues and concerns about noise.

“Legal precedent is very thin here,” said Arthur Holland Michel, co-director of the Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard College. “Little of the existing law is based specifical­ly on drones.”

It’s also unclear who will be the ultimate arbitrator for these concerns. The FAA is in charge of aircraft safety, but questions of privacy or trespassin­g could be left up to the states, said William Breetz, vice president of the Uniform Laws Commission, a nonprofit organizati­on that drafts model legislatio­n for states and began tackling drone laws more than two years ago.

Here’s more informatio­n about some of these undetermin­ed issues.

Do you own part of the airspace above your house or can a drone fly freely through?

When it comes to drone delivery services, questions about potential trespassin­g still remain.

Some property owners have argued that they own a certain amount of the airspace above their homes, meaning any drones that fly into that area without permission would be unwanted visitors.

Others have said you don’t own that when it comes to aircraft. Drones are categorize­d as aircraft, and the FAA has stipulated that no one has the right to interfere with the flight of an aircraft.

“There’s a lot of uncertaint­y now in the law for those kinds of issues,” said Robert Heverly, associate professor of law at Albany Law School.

Others have expressed concerns about what kinds of data delivery drones could gather on their flights to and from drop-off points. Amazon has a patent for a data analysis system that would use informatio­n the drone collected during its flight to help make recommenda­tions for future purchases. For example, if the drone took an image of your dead lawn while it was delivering your package, perhaps you’d get more online ads for fertilizer.

While many local government­s forbid the use of drones for surveillan­ce purposes, it’s unclear whether the activities described in Amazon’s data analysis patent would fall under that definition, Holland Michel said.

Current privacy standards were establishe­d long before the advent of drones, let alone potential drone delivery operations, he said.

"There are questions around whether these standards need to be updated in light of the fact that we are looking at a near-future where the airspace will be very crowded with drones that are all capturing informatio­n,” Holland Michel said.

If a drone has a glitch and drops its package on you, leaving you injured, who’s at fault?

In some cases, existing laws could apply. For example, if a delivery drone dropped a package that hit someone, the drone operator and his or her employer would most likely be liable — in line with standard rules on negligence, Heverly said.

The same would likely apply to a drone that damaged property in the course of a delivery, Heverly said.

But it could get tricky if delivery companies employ subcontrac­tors to operate the drones.

In those cases, the companies could defer responsibi­lity to the contracted operator if something happened, though it depends on how much control the companies have over the individual subcontrac­tors, Heverly said. The more rules and restrictio­ns the company has for its subcontrac­tors, the more the company could be considered the employer, meaning it would take on the liability.

For the person who was hit by the drone, their lawyer would likely sue both parties — the drone operator and the company that hired that operator — and sort out the responsibl­e party through litigation, Heverly said.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? What if a delivery drone falls on your head? Thorny legal questions loom as services increase.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE What if a delivery drone falls on your head? Thorny legal questions loom as services increase.

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