Or to be more precise, Japanese drone police
As we all know, drones became very popular in the recent year. they begun as one off custom builds, hand made by model freaks. Not long later, people realized that drone’s are really cool and can be used not only to fly around the garden.
As always, whenever something becomes trendy, big companies have to lay their hand on it as soon as possible – this is how drones entered mass production and started to be used for various purposes such as filming, shipping cargo, competition etc.
So, when something gets popular, a new law has to be created – a law that would regulate the use of a given product. Drones couldn’t dodge that and nowadays a regular drone user has to obey strict rules. For example, flying a drone is prohibited in most big cities. Of course, rules are made to be broken, so various cities come up with new solutions.
Japan, which is the topic of the article came up with a pretty spectacular solution – they invented the drone police.
The drone police unit is armed with big drones that are equipped with special nets made for catching other drones that are breaking the law. The way it works is very simple. Police drone simply approaches the criminal drone and attempts to catch it into its net, preventing it from further activities.
It may sound silly, but hey, if it looks stupid but it works – it works
Japanese police have made it so that drone owners now play by their rules) If it’s effective, then there’s nothing wrong with it. The Japanese have always had creative approaches to solving problems))
I have heard that the British police use drones to catch speeding cars and dangerous drivers on the motorway they locate the speeding car with the drone and then inform the nearest police car. drones evolved very quickly true out the year.
Japan really took “fight fire with fire” to the next level—now we have drones arresting other drones! Imagine being a tiny rogue drone, minding your illegal business, and suddenly a giant police drone swoops in with a net like Spider-Man. Crime-fighting has officially gone sci-fi, and I’m here for it.