I read the ruling, and it said that the Park Service had to treat commercial filming on the same basis as non-commercial filming. Previously, the NPS had a policy that all commercial filming required a permit, but that non-commercial filming didn't.
The judge even wrote that permit requirements or filming bans could be acceptable if they were targeted based on resourse impacts instead of on the commercial vs. non-commercial nature of the project.
The Park Service bans flying drones because of resource impacts, regardless of whether they have a camera on board, or whether they're used commercially or non-commercially.
I'm not expecting that to change.