Preparing Countermeasures For Terror Attacks Using Drones (remotecontrolproject.org) 102
An anonymous reader writes: You can add terrorist-controlled drones to the list of dangers we need to be prepared for, says the Oxford Research Group. Its new report contains information about over 200 current and upcoming unmanned aerial, ground and marine systems, and evaluates their capabilities for delivering payloads (e.g. explosive devices), imaging capabilities (e.g. for reconnaissance purposes), and their general capabilities. Even though the report notes that commercial drones have a limited flight time, range of movement, and payload capacity, and that their operators still have to be relatively close to a potential target, the researchers are particularly worried about the possibility of drones being used as remotely controlled explosive devices. They say, "The technology of remote-control warfare is impossible to control; the ultimate defence is to address the root drivers of the threat in the first place."
Better Idea.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Stop destabilising foreign nations and victimising populations and there won't be any terrorism (except the false flag variety, which is almost all of it anyway....so stop doing that too....)
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You know, back before 9/11, when websites were "cool". I remember the gaffaws we had looking at the FBIs infamous "10 most wanted" list. Remember that? Seems like a lifetime ago doesn't it? A whole 15-20 years.
They couldn't even come up with a top 10 list that was the least bit scary. The only "terrorist" on there set off a bomb...at night... when nobody was around. The rest were mostly various drug dealers, including some dude with really wild hair who was (big shock) the one acid dealer.
So basically, the
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Not a single one.
You don't have to be Muslim to be a terrorist, and you don't have to be a terrorist if you're Muslim. All you have to do is be a bully to someone else's coward.
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This is a red herring because international terrorism is not the root issue here. Drones are a very affordable technology that could be used by any whack-job with a desire to cause damage and pain, regardless of motives.
Re: One word (Score:2)
Right. Let's get rid of the terrorists and replace it with a psychopathic machine.
Summary of report (Score:2)
The report notes that drones work for shit in rainy and windy weather. In other words, our best defense is to amp up the global warming until hurricanes are near us at all times.
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The report notes that drones work for shit in rainy and windy weather.
Actually, they're not that bad. Because of their very nature, they are actually resistant to that sort of thing in a way that "normal" R/C aircraft aren't. Auto-leveling flight has been sneaking into R/C airplanes for a while, but it's typical for "drones". A 10dof sensor board will run you $10, a GPS with a nice big antenna is $10, and if you give plenty of altitude then there's little to run into. Brushless motors don't go straight to hell when water goes through them like the old brushed ones did. People
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That's a power consideration.
But power is not a problem : people have been making pulse-jet powered UAVs for at least a decade. (no, the video is not a UAV, but the only UAV video I could find had no audio and the best thing about pulse jet videos is the audio).
You can make a pulse jet out of bent steel tubing. And because they're powerful, they can be heavy. Because they can run on liquid fuel, they can have endurance. They worked well enough in WWII - their main drawback was their guidance system was shit
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Muffed up the video link :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] - Pulse jet UAV from 2006
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] - 200MPH Radio controlled pulse jet plane
Anti Drones (Score:2)
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Re: Anti Drones (Score:2)
I'm thinking lasers. The carbon fiber frames will burn up quick.
Root Causes Important, but You have Crime & Cr (Score:4, Interesting)
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It is far trickier than the current anti-drone technology implies. Consider the flight path of a drone attacking a public speaker. All hovering and manoeuvring is done at a distance to get the drone in the best position for a final run. A path as close to people as possible and just out of reach, on a direct vector as possible. That final run will be done a maximum forward speed, giving seconds as reaction time. The laser will end up being aimed at spectators heads as well as the drone, so now you have, "
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shotgun, dumbass. The NRA is composed of people who understand that gun control is all about keeping the muzzle pointed in a safe direction. We don't point rifles up; we use shotguns for flying things.
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The point you missed is that shotguns are not rifles. Shotguns are generally smoothbores.
Shotguns are aimed up because that is what is used for hunting birds. You don't generally hunt a flying bird with a rifle. You want shot dispersal to bracket them for much the same reason you wanted to shoot at airplanes with proximity fused ammo or a veritable hail of bullets: it's hard to hit a flying, moving object with a single slug.
You should always point any weapon downrange and/or toward the ground when it is
Easy solution (Score:2)
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Crashing to the ground into a crowded street... (Score:2)
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There is also that small question of what happens when a five, ten or even twenty pound object hovering from even a few dozen feet comes crashing down into a crowded street. Probably not an ideal solution, liabilities and whatnot.
When they are flying IEDs they don't go crash, they just go boom.
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However, there are no flying IEDs. The whole idea is terminally stupid - there are so many better ways to deliver explosives.
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there are no flying IEDs. The whole idea is terminally stupid - there are so many better ways to deliver explosives.
I'm fairly certain they all involve math, though.
the smaller drones work well inside (Score:2)
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you know: a sports arena, school, etc.
If you can already sneak your explosives inside a building, why do you need a drone? Just drop it and leave. Or stay, if that's your persuasion.
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you know: a sports arena
I am actually wondering when entities like the NFL and NCAA will start using camera-equipped drones to film football games. They already have cameras mounted on rope and pulley systems for most aerial shots, but a drone would allow for much more interesting (and more available) filming angles. They've already started putting cameras in the end zone pylons, so the technology to get live broadcast quality cameras down to a size small enough for drones (and drone reliability up) can't be more than a few year
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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The cars, dumbass. Enough with your rhetoric about terrorists "destroying our nation". If the best they can do is kill 34 people a year then they're obviously not very good at their job. Let's concentrate on important things and save our money instead of wasting it in a fruitless attempt to stop terrorism entirely, which is a literall impossibility.
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You are obviously quite afraid of a possible ISIS-dominated future. Otherwise arguing that 34 terrorist deaths (last year in the U.S.) is more important that 34,000 vehicle deaths doesn't make sense.
Our war on terror has been a fiasco. We would have been better off doing nothing. More U.S. soldiers dies in our gulf wars than in 9/11. Some hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and Afghanistanis are dead. And we have way more problems than than when we started! Not too mention the injured soldiers, horrible laws li
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Our war on terror has been a fiasco.
I disagree. The purpose of this "war" obviously was never to be won (because it cannot, just like the now over 100 years of the "war on drugs"), but to keep the fear in the US population and the west in general alive. This serves several purposed. For one, a population in fear is easy to govern. It also serves to blow up the budget for organizations like the DHS, the TSA, the NSA, etc. All these organizations are primarily in love with power and money, their actual duty, namely to server the US population,
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It's reasonable to suppose that fear of getting caught is a deterrent against many acts. You know that whole "if you could be invisible.." thought that people explore? Nobody ever answers "put in unpaid overtime without the boss yelling at me," or "watch rabbits up close without scaring them away."
Drones (yes, that's the word people have collectively decided to use -- no quotes required) provide a delivery platform with large or total deniability, and that changes peoples' (largely unformalized) risk asse
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Sports drone with FPV control, or AI face recognition and GPS. Setting a drone up with 1 km + radio is also not very difficult.. Or with a bit more technical ability use an IR laser designator.. Fit it with a knife or an anti-personnel grenade or small high explosive bomb. Or as rtb61 said you could cover a drones blades with poison..
If you have a really high profile target and some more money then go for an attack based on drone swarming technology.. Stopping one drone might be quite easy but stopping a do
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They are not really talking about protecting the general public, they don't give a crap about the general public. This is about protecting specific people from targeted assassinations. The simplest attack, coating a drones blades with a toxin and flying it at the targets head, a very small drone but still logically very effective, the infamous poisoned blade.
Re:who really cares? (Score:4, Insightful)
And that is exactly what reality looks like: Terrorism is not a relevant threat in the west, unless a power-hungry political class, a press serving them and a population that does not get it makes it one. The mechanism at work here is that a population in fear is easy to rule, as a population in fear is dumb.
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Terrorism is the mouse that roars.
Legalize Jamming (Score:2, Interesting)
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Just make it legal to jam drones. Problem solved.
So you have a plan for how you're going to jam GPS across a miles-wide area, but without impacting all of the other users who need it? And, you have a pretty good sense of how all "drones" use RF? Meaning, you're going to jam all of the same frequencies that mobile phones and WiFi devices use in the entire area? Please be specific.
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You ought to at least attempt to learn a thing or two about allocated spectrum, directional radiators, and tune able power levels before showing you ignorance to the masses.
Really? You're lecturing me about learning something as I respond to a completely witless post about "just jam drones" being the simple solution?
No, learning more about directional radiators and tunable power levels won't teach me more that I need to know about how "jamming a drone" that's on a combination of inertial, magnetic, and GPS guidance while moving on a pre-programmed waypoint path at, say, 75mph just above tree-top level as it approaches from a mile away. Though it sounds like YOU could lear
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"PURPOSE:
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the California Air Resources
Board (CARB) mandate that engines with adjustable parameters (i.e., carburetors) utilized in
lawn and garden equipment be âoetamper resistant.â The carburetors present on some MTD
products require the use of a special carburetor adjustment tool for a product being serviced or
repaired, due to the tamper resistant mechanisms present on the product. This special tool is to
be made available and used exclusiv
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The lawnmower police state.. And it wont do a thing to actually combat climate change..
Obligatory Buckaroo Banzai Reference (Score:2)
Defense Secretary: "What?"
I'll rain hell foam!!! (Score:1)
As loosely as the term "terrorist" is thrown around these days, they had better look out for my drone mounted nerf guns
Re: I'll rain hell foam!!! (Score:2)
I'll just spray your done with my super soaker and see who wins.
Escalate! (Score:2)
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The concentrated stupid of your posting is the only danger here. From the document you link:
Orally, potassium chloride is toxic in excess; the LD50 is around 2.5 g/kg (meaning that a lethal dose for 50% of people weighing 75 kg (165 lb) is about 190 g (6.7 ounces)). The oral toxicity of sodium chloride (table salt) is about the same, 3.75 g/kg. Thus potassium chloride is harmless for alimentation (and even good for health, see previous paragraph). But intravenously, without the step of digestive absorption, this is reduced to just over 30 mg/kg.
That still means you have to pump a 75kg person (not large) full of 2.25g (almost all 10ccs in solution) to get a 50% death rate and that is without medical attention and you have to hit a vein (because that is what "intravenously" means). Not a credible threat. I also would also very much expect the target to indeed start screaming and panic if stuck with a large needle without warning. The countermeasure is simple
Root Threat (Score:2)
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And then they are out of a job and purpose in life. Made obsolete by technology. I feel sad for them.
Yes, that is about the level of respect that idea deserves. Sure, somebody will do it eventually, but the danger here is "car", not "self driving" and society has decided to accept it a long, long time ago.
Sending a drone to Paradise? (Score:2)
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Yep they already have suicide robots - they call them 'martyrs'.
My concerns about losing my life (Score:2)
Did Oxford researches try to pilot an UAV? (Score:1)
Being a pilot of a manned aircraft is not a transferable skill, as a pilot is not sitting in the UAV cabin and is not looking forward.
Let them try to land an UAV hundred meters away on a certain spot. Good luck.
If someone has got enough dedication, discipline, aptitude to become a pilot capable to take off, fly, and land an UAV he/she will not be a terrorist in the first plac
Root Causes? (Score:2)
A decade late and unknown trillions short (Score:2)
Seriously, more than a decade ago: http://www.wired.com/2004/04/i... [wired.com]