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United States News Technology

NYPD To Test Public Announcement Drones During Emergencies (vice.com) 49

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: [T]he NYPD announced it's piloting test drones to fly over at-risk neighborhoods and make public announcements during emergencies. On Sunday, at the tail end of a weekend of heavy rainfall and flooding, New York City's emergency notification system tweeted that the NYPD would be "conducting a test of remote-piloted public messaging capabilities" at a location confirmed to AM New York as Hook Creek Park in Queens. The NYPD told AM New York that the drones were being tested to make announcements during weather-related emergencies, and were being tested in advance of more flooding expected this weekend. The comments suggest that public announcement drones could be deployed in a real-world scenario very soon.

Besides the eeriness of a drone instructing New Yorkers during life-threatening emergencies, the test raises questions about the NYPD's compliance with laws that require the agency to alert the public when deploying surveillance technology. The NYPD is required to post an impact statement and use policy on its website and seek public comment 90 days prior to deploying new surveillance technology to comply with the 2020 POST Act. However, according to the law, the NYPD merely has to amend old use policies if it is using previously existing surveillance tech for new purposes. For its use policy for unmanned aircraft, finalized in April 2021, there is no mention of the emergency announcements. The document says, "In situations where deployment of NYPD (drones) has not been foreseen or prescribed in policy, the highest uniformed member of the NYPD, the Chief of Department, will decide if deployment is appropriate and lawful. In accordance with the Public Oversight of Surveillance Technology Act, an addendum to this impact and use policy will be prepared as necessary to describe any additional uses of UAS." No such addendum appears on the website.
"This plan just isn't going to fly. The city already has countless ways of reaching New Yorkers, and it would take thousands of drones to reach the whole city," Albert Fox Cahn, executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project told Motherboard by email.

"The drones are a terrible way to alert New Yorkers, but they are a great way to creep us out. More alarmingly, the NYPD is once again violating the landmark Public Oversight of Surveillance Technology (POST) Act, which requires public notice and comment before deploying new surveillance systems." Cahn added: "No gadget is going to be a substitute for effective city management and communication practices."
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NYPD To Test Public Announcement Drones During Emergencies

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  • by algaeman ( 600564 ) on Tuesday July 18, 2023 @11:41PM (#63698002)
    Will they dispense knockout gas or bullets?
    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Will they dispense knockout gas or bullets?

      It will dispense lead-saturated "knockout gas" with great velocity.

  • I suppose being black or brown is a big risk when you're dealing with the NYPD.
    • It is nowhere near the risk that black and brown people face from other black and brown people, which is why, in general, black and brown people favor MORE law enforcement, not less. As do I, although with some constraints that don't exist at present.

      I still have zero tolerance for that small handful of police who abuse their power, whether for racist reasons, or for any other. I'm against "stop and frisk" absent probable cause. I also believe police should come from the neighborhoods in which they will

      • by Rujiel ( 1632063 )
        The purpose of these surveillance measures isn't to help anything or anyone "at risk", it's to enhance existing revenue streams and rackets--red light cameras, civil asset forfeiture, raids, etc. A lot of these 'at risk' areas are populations that have already been displaced multiple times, redlined out of other optionas, and seen their cities subdivided by freeways that hole away those with no transportarion. The point of this is not to fix anything for these neighborhoods, it's to keep things as they are.
      • by Rujiel ( 1632063 )
        An example appeared, right on time https://yro.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]
  • Of course people should be freaked out. That's the whole point! What do you want a sleepy emergency notification? A gentle nudge telling you to evacuate? People already ignore fire alarms.

  • More like Personally Offensive Situation Trackers. Or Pissed Off Someone Talked. Or Please Offer Sex Today. Or, my favourite: People Often Say Trash. Because this is New York.
  • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @12:08AM (#63698038)
    "Once upon a time, NYPD introduced Public Announcement Drones for use only in emergencies."

    ...

    "And then life was no longer worth living."

    "The End"
  • by Nkwe ( 604125 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @12:17AM (#63698044)
    Would be a great test message.
  • by Kyogreex ( 2700775 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @12:33AM (#63698062)
    Attention ground units: anti-citizen reported in this community. Code: lock, cauterize, stabilize.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    even used solely for announcements, the mental image of a booming "establishment" voice echoing across an urbanscape is quite well established as a dystopic one

    that said i think "city already has countless ways of reaching New Yorkers" is gargling on a telecom sense of security

    THAT all said there's no way they'll be solely used for announcements - ACTUAL prevention of future straying is all that matters, not "a paper rule says so" prevention

  • by joshuark ( 6549270 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @01:18AM (#63698136)

    From the movie "Blade Runner" the early 80s release, after Rick Deckard retires a replicant, a police car/drone is intoning "Move on, move on..." while the police are checking the scene. So very prescient scene, idea? Now for the NYPD to implement...

    JoshK.

  • One of those newer Gatling gun style setups mounted on the roof of your 4x4. Maybe someone can enlighten us on the name of that bad boy. I've lost touch with all my old friends in Alabama that kept up with all that stuff.

    • Sounds like the M134 minigun https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    • You can't fire a weapon into the air in or near New York without a huge risk of it landing on someone innocent.

      I'm pro-RKBA, even in New York, but the use of a weapon under any circumstances should always be a last resort, not a first. Especially where there is a large risk of collateral damage (which education, plus proper choice of weapon and ammo can help reduce).

  • by khchung ( 462899 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @04:01AM (#63698296) Journal

    Even if this drone system worked perfectly, how are they going to prevent imposters using drones pretending to be police drones? E.g. "evacuating" a store and then go in and take everything?

  • You know the next thing is dirigibles and then there'll be other public service announcements like the one in the subject line.
    New Nexus models and probably promoting Tyrell Corporations new breakthroughs .

    LoB
  • not a good idea (Score:4, Insightful)

    by zeiche ( 81782 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @04:31AM (#63698342)

    the city of Rancho Cordova, CA regularly uses police helicopters to announce whatever is on their mind.

    not good.

    the city of NY should be prepared to hear a bunch of announcements. police think they are the bees knees, everything will be an emergency and there will be plenty of things needed broadcasting.

    trust me folks, this sucks. it reminds me of loudspeakers in China and Vietnam. folks, these are communist countries and we’re headed in the same direction.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @04:40AM (#63698358)

    How is this different than a speaker on a police car, other than it also makes a buzzing sound and reaches more people.

    I guess "in the sky" makes it scary. But this is good for you citizens. Stay distracted by the fact we got a toy with a speaker. It'll stop you questioning us about our military grade weapons.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      How is this different than a speaker on a police car,

      It will use blockchain AI and facial recognition to steal all your bitcoins.
      If you don't comply it will block your Instagram and you'll be forced back to Twitter.

  • by Jedi Holocron ( 225191 ) on Wednesday July 19, 2023 @06:27AM (#63698448) Homepage Journal

    The NYPD.

    That's it. That's the comment.

  • Some real Blade Runner ideas going on there.

  • by kackle ( 910159 )
    So anybody (a state actor?) with a bunch of drones could mimic the police, communicating false information.
  • These will be fun in the next hurricane or blizzard.

  • If the NYPD has money for "announcement drones", when there is *already* a system to send an emergency message to every cell phone within a certain radius, then either they have too much money (I'd sooner they gave raises to officers than spend money on these drones), or the drones aren't for announcements.

    New York City has some of the toughest gun laws in the country...but it sounds like the NYPD wants give targets to their constituents who possess firearms. No New Yorker is going to snitch on which neighb

    • Not even after innocent people are injured or killed by having it (or the bullet) fall on them? Or maybe start a fire that takes out a whole city block and half the people in it?

      I'm no rat - I prefer to deal with miscreants in a more old-school fashion. But just because I might not rat out someone who puts innocent people at risk, doesn't mean I won't deal with that person some other way.

  • Guess someone rewatched Dark Angel and thought it was a good idea.

  • Public Oversight of Surveillance Technology (POST) Act, which requires public notice and comment before deploying new surveillance systems notice and comment, not permission. Because why have any sort of voter review over major programs with massive impact to privacy and other civil rights?
  • How will the public make the difference between a NYPD's drone shouting directive for their own's good, and a terrorist's drone pretending to act for NYPD and telling directive that maximize chaos?
  • I feel like my professor hates me. He constantly checks essays and says that my argumentation is very bad. Does anyone know what to do about this?
    • Hi. I've encountered this problem. My professor also often said that my essays have very poor argumentation. And one day I got tired of it and decided that someone should write my argumentative essay for me. So https://domyessay.com/argument... [domyessay.com] became my salvation. After that he started praising and saying that this is how you should have acted right away. But what does he care if it is all real? I am glad that I was able to close his subject to high grades with excellent papers from this service. And the p

Truly simple systems... require infinite testing. -- Norman Augustine

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