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See more details in this news article:
DJI Creates High-Security Solution For Government Drone Programs
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How "they've" let DJI what?It's amazing how they've let a Chinese company DJI that is well known for sending data back to China.
So it seems it's one rule for one and another rule for other companies.
It's so well known because people on forums keep talking about it as if it was true.It's amazing how they've let a Chinese company DJI that is well known for sending data back to China.
US Military likely wouldn't consider DJI. There are plenty of homegrown companies working to fill the needs of the military.Interesting. An attempt to capture markets like U.S. military I suspect.
They don’t mention how they propose to keep it from “calling home” but still stay updated.
At a comparable price to off the shelf DJI?US Military likely wouldn't consider DJI. There are plenty of homegrown companies working to fill the needs of the military.
Educate me please, as to the U.S. companies supplying drones. Thanks.US Military likely wouldn't consider DJI. There are plenty of homegrown companies working to fill the needs of the military.
Here are a couple of examples:Educate me please, as to the U.S. companies supplying drones. Thanks.
AeroVironment is one. Most of them are companies that most people have never heard of because they don't sell to the consumer market. Lockheed Martin and Boeing have their fingers in this as well. If they're making combat drones it's not difficult to image they can adapt the technology for non-combat applications.Educate me please, as to the U.S. companies supplying drones. Thanks.
Martin UAV and AAI are a few examples. I'm sure there are others out there.Educate me please, as to the U.S. companies supplying drones. Thanks.
I was about to make the same post. I didn't understand the original post.How "they've" let DJI what?
Just because DJI has introduced this model to the worldwide market doesn't mean the U.S. government or anyone else has to buy it.
And there are plenty of non-military applications where security isn't as big a concern where this might be useful. If FEMA wanted to survey storm damage or the USDA wanted to survey flooding, for example.
I was about to make the same post. I didn't understand the original post.
That said, this seems like bad marketing on DJI's part. Yeah, we all know our drones send data back to China and frankly I don't really care if China knows I'm flying over my lake house or my kid's park or my country cabin. But they should have called it the "secure" or "private" model or something like that. Calling it the "Government Edition" seems to highlight the issue that I think they're trying to avoid.
Seems DJI is confirming what we’ve been trying to tell you this whole time. That they do send info back to DJI servers. Guess we weren’t crazy after all or according to you what’s the point of making a special firmware that doesn’t phone home if the original one doesn’t?It's so well known because people on forums keep talking about it as if it was true.
But not everything you read on forums is actually true.
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