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The Almighty Buck Businesses United States Technology

FAA Allows AIG To Use Drones For Insurance Inspections 53

An anonymous reader writes with news that AIG is the latest insurance company given permission by the FAA to use drones for inspections. "The Federal Aviation Administration has been rather stingy when it comes to giving companies the OK to test, let alone employ, drones. After getting permission this week, AIG joins State Farm and USAA as insurance providers with exemptions that allow them to use the UAVs to perform tasks that are risky to regular folks — things like roof inspections after a major storm. In addition to keeping its inspectors safe, the company says drones will speed up the claims process, which means its customers will, in theory, get paid faster. 'UAVs can help accelerate surveys of disaster areas with high resolution images for faster claims handling, risk assessment, and payments,' the news release explains. 'They can also quickly and safely reach areas that could be dangerous or inaccessible for manual inspection, and they provide richer information about properties, structures, and claim events.'"
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FAA Allows AIG To Use Drones For Insurance Inspections

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  • At first blush, this exemption seems reasonable. I can see how insurance companies can make use of drones in their business to speed up work and to improve safety.

    I haven't thought of ways this can be abused and what not. Any reasons why this would be a bad idea?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Skidborg ( 1585365 )
      Drones being used for spying on other kinds of insurance claims. Guy with an "injured" back gets caught chopping wood by flying spies? No more money for him.
      • And reducing fraud is a bad thing.... why?

        • Because the ease of using drones allows them to spy on and harass everyone, including those with valid claims, those who live in the same house / nearby but aren't involved in the claim, etc.

        • Remember the lady who had her insurance coverage for depression revoked because she was caught smiling in a facebook photo?
        • And reducing fraud is a bad thing.... why?

          Because it's not always fraud.

          There are a lot of people who really are disabled but who are periodically able to do more serious activities despite the disability, or who try to get better by doing such activities. When an insurance company or benefits arm of the government sees that, they often try to take benefits away. It creates perverse incentives to not try to get better, and it results in disabled people being hurt because they're trying to get better.

          • by Livius ( 318358 )

            Because it's not always fraud.

            Not always. But sometimes. Proof matters.

            • Because it's not always fraud.

              Not always. But sometimes. Proof matters.

              Proof matters if you're dealing with an impartial evaluation that understands more about a person's life than one photograph. If you are perceptive and spend several days with a person in their ordinary life, for example, you understand a lot more than any jury or claims evaluator ever will.

              There are people on disability who shouldn't be.

              I know people who are on one kind of disability or another who absolutely could do certain kinds of jobs and should, but any clinical evaluation is going to say they're un

          • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

            ...or people that just think they are better and end up regretting their actions the next morning.

            American workers are constantly encouraged to push themselves past sensible physical limits and to ignore genuine health and safety concerns.

    • In general things involving roof inspection are well suited to be done by drone. While there still are times you'd need to put a person on the roof, a drone with a high rez camera can get you the information you need in most cases. Safer, and also faster.

      If they weren't so expensive I'd love to have one for my own use for that purpose. I live in a second story condo and access to the roof is a problem (you need a really big ladder). I'd love to be able to fly a drone up to check for debris occluding vents,

      • If they weren't so expensive I'd love to have one for my own use for that purpose.

        DJI just announced, and will shortly be shipping v3 of their very popular Phantom platform. There are going to be a LOT of people itchy to move to that unit for one reason or another. You should be able to get hold of a gently used v2 for very little by this summer. Cheapie cheap cheap.

        • For this use I'd need one with realtime video capability since it would be non-line of sight operation. Hence more cost. Since it is mostly just me wanting to check on things, not worth it.

          If there is an actual problem, I have professionals look at it.

      • Equipping these with spread-spectrum cameras would also be great -- check for leaks/weak spots by checking the infra-red, etc.

    • by dougmc ( 70836 )

      The FAA doesn't really concern itself with "privacy", which is the primary problem that people have with these so called "drones" -- the FAA's concern is "safety".

      And yet they also know that perfect safety is a pipe dream, and so they try to find a balance between safety and utility, and if they err, they try to err on the side of safety. And in the case of unmanned aircraft, they have erred *massively* on the side of safety so far.

      The safety concerns of this are very small, and so there's really no reason

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The FAA is so old and slow, it is literally costing the US money. There are millions of legitimate uses of drones that should require no regulation at all. Not flying it over a group of people or your neighbors house, and keeping under about 200 feet AGL, go for it.

    They have also destroyed small aircraft aviation and made them unsafe by creating such heavy regulations that not even Cessna could afford to bring a modern safe aircraft to market. Sport planes are booming if you have $150k, but only because th

  • They say it will speed up they pay process. It will also speed up the reason-for-not-paying process.
    • Which would then speed up the appeal process. A lack of decision is the same as a denial of coverage. In both cases the policy holder gets no money.

  • AIG and Goldman Sachs will get anything they want from the government. I mean, what the hell, they own it!

  • Watch the noise level in our communities go through the roof as these devices become commonly used by business, government, and police. When you see drones in videos you seldom have audio.
  • As long as the drones are FAA certified and the operators are properly certificated and obey all of the FARs, including minimum altitudes and separation from buildings, people, and other aircraft, then I don't have an issue with it.

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