Hackers Build $2,500 Drone That Can Launch Network Assaults From The Air

There are a lot of positive uses for drones and other unmanned aircraft. Amazon envisions a day when packages will be dropped off on your doorstep courtesy of a drone, and Facebook wants to use them to bring wireless broadband to remote regions. Good stuff, though as it goes with just about all technology, somebody’s going to find a nefarious use for it.

In this case, there may be a day when drones are used to drop malware from the sky. The foundation is already being laid, though not specifically for that purpose. There’s a company called Aerial Assault that modded a quadcopter with a Raspberry Pi computer running the Kali Linux penetration tester software. It’s also equipped with alpha radio antennas for improved broadcast range.

Quadcopter

With these pieces in place, the quadcopter can fly above homes and businesses scanning for insecure Wi-Fi networks and devices. Aerial Assault’s intentions are to help people and firms diagnose their networks, but the company also acknowledges that with just a little bit of modding, its quadcopter could also be used to exploit any vulnerabilities it finds. In other words, the potential for good versus evil depends on who’s controlling the device.

“It is up to the user to decide what they do with it. If the user, they have Raspberry Pi with Kali on it, they can reprogram custom scripts. That’s good for doing more extensive [penetration] testing. But, you know, scripts can be whatever they are,” said David Jordan, a spokesperson for Aerial Assault. “Our intended use is for pentesters to be able to diagnose vulnerabilities and help people understand what their Wi-Fi accessiblity is, even up in the air.”

As configured, the quadcopter runs some basic tests and logs GPS coordinates. It will be available to purchase later this week from the company’s website for around $2,500.

http://hothardware.com/news/hackers-build-2500-drone-that-can-launch-network-assaults-from-the-air

The Pentagon’s half billion dollar drone boondoggle

predatorharrier

Rivalry between the Army and Air Force over Predator drones may have cost the Pentagon over $500 million in wasteful spending, according to a report released under the Freedom of Information Act.

The report, which the Pentagon’s Inspector General completed in 2010, is not available on the Defense Department’s public website, which instructs people to request it through the Freedom of Information Act. The Pentagon released a copy of the report to The Intercept this week, nearly five years after it was originally requested.

The report blasts both the Army and the Air Force for spending $115 million in 2008 and 2009 on research efforts that were supposed to help combine their Predator programs, in other words, to buy the same drone. Those efforts were “ineffective,” the report said, depriving the Pentagon of an estimated $400 million in savings that would have resulted.

The inability of military services to agree on a single aircraft or weapon is nothing new, but the report addresses one of the more high-profile conflicts between the Army and the Air Force in recent years. In 2008, then Defense Secretary Robert Gates rebuked the Air Force, saying it was like “pulling teeth” to get the service to contribute more drones to Iraq and Afghanistan.

While the Air Force was being criticized for not sending enough drones, the Army, in the meantime, was buying its own Predators under a program known as Sky Warrior. The Army’s encroachment on traditional Air Force territory set off a bitter turf war between the two services; Army commanders griped that the Air Force didn’t support ground troops, and theAir Force claimed the Army didn’t understand how to operate drones effectively.

In a dispute that played out publicly, the Air Force Association even called the Army drone program “a house of cards.”

Among other differences between the services, the Army deploys its drone pilots close to ground operations, while the Air Force pilots its drones from remote bases, including in the United States. The aircraft themselves are also different; for example, the Air Force’s Predator uses jet fuel, while the Army’s can run on heavy fuel.

In May 2008, Pentagon officials ordered the two services to unify their efforts to save money, since they were effectively buying the same type of drone from General Atomics Aeronautical Systems. The services never did that; the Air Force responded by ending its purchase of the Predator altogether and buying a new, larger variant of the Predator called Reaper.

Sen. Chuck Grassley criticized the Inspector General for taking nearly two years to complete the audit, and then doing little to enforce its recommendations. “While the audit was in progress, DoD pulled the rug out from under the auditors,” Grassley said in a floor statement in 2011. “A new directive was issued, stating that the two programs did not have to be combined.”

When the auditors recommended “administrative action” against personnel who failed to follow the original guidance, the Pentagon, Grassley said, “tossed the auditors a bone,” by studying “lessons learned” from the program.

While many of the Defense Department’s Inspector General reports are available to the public, this Predator report was marked “official use only.” A spokesperson for the Inspector General was not able to comment by publication on why the unclassified report was not released previously.

As to the issues raised in the report, Pentagon spokesperson Maureen Schumann pointed to the Defense Department’s response included in the report, which notes that the Air Force met the military’s demand for increasing surveillance capabilities by “zeroing procurement of Predator and maximizing procurement of Reaper aircraft” in its budget plans.

Whether combining the programs really would have ultimately produced savings is unclear. “I have no doubt, however, that they wasted lots of money on these programs,” said Chuck Spinney, a former military analyst famous for criticizing the cost of the Pentagon’s weapons. “But the claim that you could save money by combining them flies in the face of history and the political dynamics of gold plating.”

According to Spinney, even when the military services have run programs jointly, such as with the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, they still end up requesting so many different modifications that it is questionable whether any money is saved in the end.

The real question may be whether both the Air Force and Army really needed to operate their own Predator drones.

Military analyst William Arkin argued the Army didn’t have a good justification for buying its own Predators, it just wanted them. “The Army in the end just wanted to be more like the Air Force, more capable of targeted killing,” Arkin told The Intercept.

In his new book, Unmanned: Droned, Data and the Illusion of Perfect Warfare,Arkin also argues that there never was a real scarcity of drones in Iraq or Afghanistan. “Even though the flock migrating to the battlefield was mind boggling in numbers and diversity, that picture of want — not control or numbers — drove the crisis,” he wrote.

https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2015/08/12/pentagons-half-billion-dollar-drone-boondoggle/

Drone almost hits Skylife Helicopter in Fresno, CA

closecall

By Joe Ybarra

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) –A drone almost hit a Fresno SkyLife helicopter on Wednesday. The close encounter happened 1,000 feet in the air, roughly two miles away from Fresno Yosemite International Airport.

A call to air traffic control from 1,000 feet above Fresno: “Medivac, we almost got hit by a drone. Just letting you know up here,” a SkyLife pilot said in a taped recording.

It was a very close call for SkyLife One, for the pilot, the crew and a patient on board. “We didn’t see it until it pretty much got right up on us; it passed right behind us,” the pilot said.

John McGrew is a flight paramedic and he was in the chopper. “The split-second thought is, you know, this guy is a little too close; this could be a serious problem,” McGrew said.

He says the pilot spotted the drone and dodged with a controlled turn. Still, it almost hit the helicopter’s rotor and just missed it by roughly 20 feet.

“With the training we receive, we’re very aware of what’s going on around us,” said Vince Ellis, a flight nurse who was also on board. “I think that’s what mitigates these risks.”

According to Federal Aviation Administration rules, the drone was in a no-fly zone. Operators are not allowed to fly above 500 feet or within five miles of an airport.

“User error, user ignorance, the user just going off and doing whatever they feel like,” said Chris Geiger, who is a UAV enthusiast.

Geiger knows the rules and says there’s no excuse for getting in the way of a SkyLife helicopter. “It’s like driving down the road, seeing an ambulance in your rearview mirror and nobody is pulling over,” said Geiger.

SkyLife One was on its way to Community Regional Medical Center. Fortunately, the close encounter was brief, and the patient was dropped off safely.

Airport police also responded to the call but couldn’t find the drone or the operator. The FAA is investigating the case.

http://abc30.com/news/drone-almost-hits-skylife-helicopter-in-fresno/925394/

California’s Drone Trespass Law Goes Too Far

California legislators are looking to tackle the perceived problem of drone trespasses with a modified version of a bill that was introduced earlier this year.  Unfortunately they’ve gone too far in the most recent version of the proposed legislation.

This bill was originally a privacy bill, and it was innovative when it was first introduced.  Because it was originally very narrowly tailored and focused on prohibiting trespasses in circumstances where a drone operator was violating a landowner’s expectation of privacy, it struck an appropriate balance between innovation and rights.  The bill was narrow and careful in that it required plaintiffs to prove a series of elements to make their case.  Requiring multiple elements of proof is important as it protects rights and guards against frivolous litigation.

 

Here is some of the original language from the preamble of the legislation when it was proposed earlier this year:

Existing law imposes liability for physical invasion of privacy, if a person knowingly enters onto the land of another without permission or otherwise commits a trespass in order to capture any image or recording of the plaintiff engaging in a private activity and the invasion is offensive to a reasonable person. (my emphasis in bold)

The key here is that the original bill created a cause of action only when someone was trespassing for a very specific purpose — to violate one’s privacy. The bill did this by modifying California’s existing physical invasion of privacy law. If the bill had stayed as proposed, to prove a violation would require a plaintiff to prove not only that the drone entered the airspace above a person’s property without their permission, but also all of the following things:

  1. The operator knowingly violated the landowner’s rights, and
  2. The operator captured any type of visual image, sound recording, or other physical impression of the plaintiff, and
  3. That image or recording of the plaintiff showed them “engaging in a private, personal, or familial activity”, and
  4. The invasion of privacy was “in a manner that is offensive to a reasonable person.”

That’s a pretty sensible approach focused on privacy harms. All four elements have to be proven, which means we won’t see spurious or vexatious litigation because the bar to litigation is high enough that someone isn’t going to sue unless their privacy was truly violated. It also serves to protect First Amendment rights because it is narrowly tailored to address privacy harms, rather than being a broad ban on aerial imaging or the mere act of flying.

But those protections are no longer in the bill. Now, the proposed legislation makes it a trespass if a drone merely flies below 350 feet altitude above someone’s property. There’s no need to prove that the operator knowingly did so, there’s no need to prove that any privacy harm occurred, or that any image or video was gathered, and there’s no requirement that reasonable people find the action offensive.

Taking those proof elements out creates a piece of legislation that effectively prohibits overflights, without any showing that any harm has occurred. This is not a smart approach as it may seriously stifle innovation and countless legitimate uses of drones ranging from journalism, to real estate photography, to power line and utility inspections.

I also wonder whether 350 feet is the right altitude. We all recognize that landowners have some right to exclude aerial trespasses. For example, a local jurisdiction could certainty pass a law prohibiting a drone from hovering at 5 feet above your back porch. How far above 5 feet does that right extend? It’s unclear, but the Supreme Court in the famous Causby case told us that ”if the landowner is to have full enjoyment of the land, he must have exclusive control of the immediate reaches of the enveloping atmosphere.” Unfortunately that still doesn’t tell us very much other than that there is some limit on the landowner’s rights when the airspace is not within “the immediate reaches of the enveloping atmosphere.”

In a white paper published last year, I focused on law enforcement drones and suggested that providing land owners with a 350 foot exclusionary zone above their property might be a way to provide them with greater privacy rights. But, by the time SB 142 was before the California Senate Judiciary Committee I had a sense that 350 feet was too high, and I suggested to committee members that the limit should probably be lower — likely 200 feet. (I’m in the process of updating a longer forthcoming version of that paper to reflect my evolving views, lowering my proposed limit from 350 feet to 200 feet).

Why 200 feet? The rationale is pretty straightforward, the FAA has long required that obstacles exceeding a height of 200 feet be marked and lighted. This regulatory approach has mostly ignored obstacles below 200 feet, leaving most of those issues to state and local land use laws. If the proposed California law is to withstand a preemption challenge, it will likely need to steer clear of areas where the Federal government has traditionally regulated — in this instance that means keeping the focus on airspace below 200 feet. Now drones aren’t obstacles, but the reference point is an important one as it suggests there is some airspace that the FAA has (with limited exceptions) not exclusively regulated.

We’re already seeing industry starting to propose 200 feet as the sensible limit. The graphic below illustrates Amazon’s plan, which features a high speed drone transit zone from 200-400 feet and an area below 200 feet that is for localized traffic. It’s a pretty good proposal, although one question is whether they are seeking to exclude certain types of drones from the 200-400 foot high speed corridor, which may unnecessarily limit non-delivery applications.
Amazon proposed a segregated airspace below 500 feet for the operation of drones on Tuesday. (Photo: Amazon.com)

Amazon proposed a segregated airspace below 500 feet for the operation of drones on Tuesday. (Photo: Amazon.com)

Irrespective of the specific merits of the overall Amazon proposal, it suggests that industry is trending towards recognizing 200 feet, not 350 feet as the altitude that makes sense for a dividing line between state and local control of drones and federal rules for drones. That is to say, the airspace above 200 feet may be the exclusive domain of the federal government and the airspace below 200 feet may be the domain of local control and perhaps may be the ceiling of property rights.

Which brings us back to California’s “drone trespass” bill. I think the proposed legislation by reaching to 350 feet reaches too high, excluding overflights in an area where technology needs space to operate and develop. We can’t predict what will come in the future, and we need to be careful to not overly limit technology while in its infancy, so that means we have to be very cautious in how we legislate. It’s also important to recognize that from a legal perspective 350 feet is far more likely to fall in a preemption challenge, meaning the law will be likely short lived if signed by the governor as is.

None of this is to fault the legislators, this is an unsettled area of law with rapidly evolving technology. Getting the altitude limit wrong is understandable — I made the mistake myself, thinking that 350 feet was the right altitude as it would provide a 150 foot transit zone for the safe operation of drones. I now think that’s too restrictive —stifling innovation and free use of this technology, without providing any real benefits to persons on the ground. The fact that well intentioned people can get this wrong, suggests that many more informed parties need to be involved in the process of creating sensible legislation.

Having more parties at the table when making rules is something that has already begun through the U.S. Department of Commerce’s multi-stakeholder process regarding drone privacy. I had the privilege of speaking at the first multi-stakeholder meeting and I found that there’s a great deal that can be learned by having the right people in the room — especially when it comes to balancing privacy with innovation and individual rights. Which is why the California bill is frustrating from a privacy perspective. Taking away important protections that prevent unnecessary litigation doesn’t serve anyone. It creates a circumstance where people are more inclined to sue even where there is no proof of harm.

It’s admittedly hard work to craft a law regarding drones that balances the rights and concerns of property owners with the rights of operators and the desire for technological innovation. If the legislature wants to create a bill that will work, they should focus on preventing harms that aren’t already addressed by existing law, reinserting the deleted elements of proof of a privacy harm that were in the original bill and served as an important limit on vexatious litigation, and modifying the landowner’s airspace right to a more defensible maximum of 200 feet.

Gregory S. McNeal is a professor at Pepperdine University and co-founder of AirMap. SIGN UP for his weekly email update here. Follow him on Twitter or Facebook.

 

http://www.forbes.com/sites/gregorymcneal/2015/08/11/californias-drone-trespass-bill-goes-too-far/

Aerial Cameras to Chase Exotic Car Rally Up the California Coast

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 12, 2015 /PRNewswire-iReach/ — Flying camera drones are creating amazing views of special events, parades, parties, and will be used to capture an exotic car rally. High-performance automobiles will be zooming up the beautiful highways of California, and aerial photography from LA based TLC Creative will capture the thrills of seeing the amazing cars as they race to Pebble Beach. The Italian Stampede car rally is taking place between Los Angeles and Pebble Beach, just in time for The Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance and the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion are featured at the Pebble Beach Automotive Week.

Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150812/257811

The Italian Stampede is an exotic car rally that has become a yearly lifestyle event where attendees come from all over the world and rally from Los Angeles to Monterey for a weekend of car events.

Aerial cameras are bringing exciting visuals that have never been seen before at special events and indoor and outdoor occasions of all kinds, pioneered by TLC. The aerial photography by TLC is complimented with aerial services for agronomy, NDVI vegetation health monitoring for property and for water conservation analysis. 3D mapping provides venue and property owners with detailed information and new ways to see their property. Real estate people have been using drone cameras to capture breathtaking views of high-end homes and developments. Air to ground live streaming video is an amazing new technology bringing aerial views into live events.

TLC Creative, with its 30 years of live special event technical production, is flying cameras at all kinds of special events, such as the Special Olympics Torch event that recently happened in Los Angeles. The aerial cameras are so small and quiet they can be flown at indoor events and parties, bringing a new level of video interaction for special event guests. Special events are now including aerial photography for 360 event capture and for views that bring a whole new perspective to viewers. Flying cameras at special events are creating great energy.

A high-tech, FUTURE themed wedding featured an amazing moment as a flying drone smoothly delivered the ring to the altar ceremony. That wedding also featured an array of live special effects by TLC, including a laser cone that ‘beamed’ the couple over to the reception. Flying cameras, aerial photography, 4K drones, aerial cameras, drones can be seen at TLCflyingcameras.com

 Agronomy, NDVI vegetation health monitoring for water conservation is the other way aerial cameras are benefiting all types of venues and property, and TLC is creating 3D mapping to help planners see their exact property characteristics.

TLC Creative, known for special effects entertainment and reveals, such as the dramatic drop-screen cylinder of video that fills Staples Center for every home game of the Los Angeles Lakers. Video panoramas and spectacular laser and pyro shows are an everyday show making experience for TLC Creative, Los Angeles based special effects company. Corporate events and entertainment industry turn to TLC Creative for live special effects impact and unforgettable shows, laser shows and fireworks to streamers and confetti, TLC is known to add wow to events. Visit TLCisCreative.com

 

 

http://news.sys-con.com/node/3410132