Company owner finds himself “on the FAA blacklist”
Steve
Watson
Infowars.com
January 30, 2014
A popular beer company received a verbal slap-down from the government this
week after it released a video depicting beer deliveries being conducted by
flying drones.
The video, produced by Lakemaid Beer, quickly went viral on the internet. It
shows a 12 pack of beer being attached to a small drone which then flies to a
remote shack where some fishermen (and women) enjoy a cold one.
A press release accompanying the video described how the
Minnesota-based company had been testing the beer drones at ice fishing lakes in
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
“It’s the perfect proving ground for drone delivery,” said the company’s
president, Jack Supple. “Our initial tests on several mid-size lakes have been
very successful. We’re looking forward to testing the range of our drones on
larger lakes.”
However, that plan seems to have hit a snag following not one but two calls
this week to Lakemaid from The Federal Aviation Authority (FAA).
Supple told the New York Daily News. “I’m on the FAA blacklist for now…
They’re not too happy with me.”
The FAA “said I would be in violation of some code, I can’t remember what the
number was,” Supple told The News. “They sent me 74 pages all about the
code.”
The law currently restricts commercial use of small drones. The FAA is
currently still formulating legislation to cover the use of such technology in
US skies.
Still, the ad has prompted a great deal of free publicity, much as Amazon’s delivery drone ad last year did.
Indeed, Supple pointed to Amazon as the inspiration for his own drones.
“Amazon faces a lot of obstacles,” said Supple. “Dense urban locations present a
host of problems to drone delivery. But our tests are on vast, wide-open frozen
lakes free of trees and power lines. Our drone can fly as the crow flies,
straight to our target, based on GPS coordinates provided by an ice angler.
Supple had believed that because his drones were operating in sparsely
populated areas with structure free horizons, he could circumvent the law.
Obviously, he was wrong.
The Amazon drone ad, as well as FedEx plans to deploy drones, were met with
warnings that the devices could be used to gather private information on
customers. Lawmakers called for stricter privacy controls, while technology experts warned that the drones will inevitably
crash into people and other objects because the technology is not yet
sophisticated enough to equip the drones with spatial awareness that would
prevent collisions.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
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