From: Lewrockwell.com - RT
Domestic drones
will soon be soaring through the sky left and right, but a company
in Oregon with ties to the US military is marketing a service that
they say will make sure private property is safe from surveillance.
The team at
one-month-old Domestic Drone Countermeasures doesn’t go into
many specifics, but says they can offer services that will make
sure Americans aren’t being spied on by hovering eyes in the
sky.
“If there’s
going to be private and commercial drones, there will be people
who want to safeguard information,” DDC’s Tim Faucett
told Portland’s
KOIN 6 News last month. “Think about industrial espionage,
or companies that don’t want drones around their facilities.”
Faucett is
no stranger to working around factories – he also runs a company,
Aplus Mobile, that has been recognized for providing “high
quality computer and appliances” to defense contractors
that deal with drones, including Boeing, Lockheed Martin and Raytheon.
As recently as November, in fact, Faucett said
he was pleased his company’s “technology and workforce
dedication continues to provide products that meet or exceed the
expectations of our military.”
Now as the
cousins of those military drones are being prepared for domestic
use, Faucett is using his know-how to help make sure anti-drone
advocates are safe and sheltered. He doesn’t say how DDC works
exactly, but swears it’s a surefire solution.
"Drones
will not fall from the sky, but they will be unable to complete
their missions,” his new company claims.
By selling
customers land-based boxes described as "non-offensive, non-combative
and not destructive,” DCD says the super-sonic snooping powers
of surveillance drones won’t be able to stand up.
“These
countermeasures are highly effective and undefeatable by most current
domestic drone technology,” the company claims.
Speaking to
US News & World Report this week, Faucett says
his team of engineers know the ins and outs of the drone business,
and could be the only option for some people right now as the risk
of drone
"We understand
the nature of the equipment drone manufacturers are using and understand
how to counter their sensors," Faucett tells US News &
World Report. "We're not going to be countering Predator
drones that are shooting cruise missiles, but we're talking about
local law enforcement drones and commercial ones that people might
be using for spying."
And although
domestic drones are expected to be widespread for a few more years
in America, Faucett says concerns are already coming up.
"I was
personally concerned and I think there's a lot of other people worried
about this," he tells US News. "We've already had many
inquiries, a lot of people saying 'Hey, I don't want these drones
looking at me.'"
The Federal
Aviation Administration expects there to be roughly 30,000 drones
in American airspace by the year 2020.
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