Criminal intent: FBI details how drones are being used for crime

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Authors: JordanEarlier this year, Elon Musk's OpenAI warned that drones could be turned into weaponized, AI-controlled swarms if left
unregulated. Turns out, that hypothetical future is already coming true, and it’s causing huge problems for law enforcement. On
Thursday, at a conference focused on unmanned tech like drones, the FBI’s operational technology law unit leader, Joe Mazel, revealed that
criminals are using drones to livestream and surveil law enforcement officials, and even to “flush them out” of hiding, Defense One
first reported. Last winter, when an FBI hostage rescue team approached a target building, their targets deployed a drone swarm in
“high-speed low passes” that forced agents out of hiding and “blinded” them from potential attackers, Mazel revealed.He declined to
provide exact details on the time and place, but he did disclose that the criminal group also used drones to livestream footage of FBI
agents to YouTube, in order to anticipate their movements—and that it took place inside a major US city. Outside of this particular
incident, Mazel and his team have uncovered evidence that criminal organizations now use drones to scope out exploitable security gaps
before a robbery, such as memorizing security guards’ movements from the air. The Telegraph reported on burglars using drones to case
houses prior to a robbery as early as 2015, but the FBI’s revelations show that improved AI tech have made drones valuable for more
high-profile crimes. For instance, Australian smugglers allegedly use drone-based livestreams to monitor the movements of dock security,
and can trigger a fire alarm to draw security away if they get too close to one of their compatriots.Drug cartel smugglers also now use
drones to avoid Border Patrol agents when crossing the border
An associate chief of the US Customs and Border Protection agency, Andrew Scharnweber, said that they used to worry about “human scouts”
that would spot agents and report movements via radio. “Now that activity has effectively been replaced by drones,” Scharnweber said,
so cartel smugglers have “little or no fear of arrest.”Perhaps most chilling of all, Mazel disclosed that organizations now employ
drones to spy on the entrances of police precincts, to see “who is going in and out of the facility and who might be co-operating with
police”
With this information, they can intimidate witnesses and discourage “snitching”. The future of drone regulationThe US government is
currently mulling options to prevent drones from being used for felonious activities
The question is, how far will they go, and how will their regulations affect law-abiding drone enthusiastsCongress is currently
reauthorizing the FAA, which regulates where commercial drones can fly, to operate for another five years, and part of this process includes
updating their regulatory powers
A couple of proposed updates could change what you can do with your drones.For instance, the FAA guidelines currently state that drones must
remain within line-of-sight of the owner, but many people ignore that
But a proposed amendment would give all drones a licensed remote ID, so law enforcement can immediately see who owns it. “Remote
identification is a huge piece” of cutting down on drone crime, FAA security and hazardous materials safety associate Angela Stubblefield
told Defense One. She also said that “weaponizing” consumer drones will be made illegal if the FAA’s reauthorization passes
Currently, it has already passed the House and will go through the Senate next. In the most extreme case, the government could choose to
employ drone-jamming equipment around sensitive areas, as they do in war zones like Syria and Iraq
However, it hasn’t been tested yet how those jammers would interfere with other commercial aircraft or cellular signals, so that may never
be a feasible option. Another option could be to go directly to commercial drone manufacturers, as the Olympic committee did when it asked
DJI to remote-update its drones so the device  wouldn't fly above PyeongChang during this year's Winter Olympics. No-fly zones could end
up being a more permanent feature over security-sensitive buildings. Ultimately, if these sorts of drone attacks continue to escalate,
it’s unclear what law enforcement will do to curtail them, or if civilian access to commercial drones could become more restricted in
future, similar to gun ownership.