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Global Ethics Corner: How Should Domestic Drones Be Regulated?

From: Carnegie Council
Series: Global Ethics Corner
Length: 01:56

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Americans are used to hearing about drones being used in Pakistan and Yemen, but they are increasingly being deployed domestically. With organizations from NASA to community colleges flying unmanned aerial vehicles in the U.S., what is the best way to regulate this technology? Read the full description.

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Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues. It presents both sides of an issue, asking viewers to weigh the information and make up their own minds.

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Piece Description

Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues. It presents both sides of an issue, asking viewers to weigh the information and make up their own minds.

Transcript

The American public has gotten used to hearing about drones in war.
From battlefields in Iraq and Afghanistan to counterterrorism operations in Yemen and Somalia, these remote-controlled, unmanned aerial vehicles have become a regular feature of modern warfare.

But recently, local fire and police departments have also received permission to fly unmanned drones carrying sophisticated surveillance equipment over American soil.

The Federal Aviation Administration has announced that it will grant permits to public safety agencies that can demonstrate their ability to safely operate drones of up to 25 pounds.

Those authorized to fly unmanned vehicles range from the obvious (like NASA and the FBI), to the not-so-obvious (like the U.S. Forest Service and the Honeywell Corporation), to the downright strange (Eastern Gateway Community College in Steubenville, Ohio).

Perhaps the most remote dr...
Read the full transcript

Additional Credits

Deborah Carroll – Executive Producer
Julia Kennedy - Producer/Host of Just Business
Robert Smithline - Editor
Terence Hurley - Editor
Gusta Johnson - Production Assistant

Related Website

www.carnegiecouncil.org