Categories: Sport

Don’t Fly Drones Over the Super Bowl. This Company Could Catch You

If the prospect of crashing your drone into a crowd of fans attending Super Bowl 58 on Sunday isn’t enough to deter you from flying it at the arena, perhaps the prospect of police knocking on your door will be.

A company called Dedrone has placed drone detection equipment at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas that can spot drone locations and, often, pinpoint the location of the drone pilot, too. That information is sent to arena security and local law enforcement. In other words, there are some teeth to the FAA’s designation of the Super Bowl as a “no drone zone.”

Despite that drone ban, and “geofencing” restrictions built into drones themselves, plenty of people violate the rules, said Dedrone President Ben Wagner. Drone flights increased nearly 20% from 2022 to 2023 at the 59 stadiums where the company operates, reaching 4,064 violations of airspace bans called temporary flight restrictions (TFRs).

Drones can offer an entertaining or lucrative new perspective for photographers and videographers who can’t afford helicopters or other traditional aerial photography options. That’s great for real estate photographers, pipeline inspectors, Hollywood directors and others. But society has yet to fully come to terms with how to handle drawbacks like privacy infringement, safety and noise.

“We see an increased amount of violations of airspace,” Wagner said. That’s despite the fact that the FAA can issue fines of $30,000 or more.

The FAA restricts flights over Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas

Airspace Link; Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET

Some are relatively benign flights, like people taking a drone selfie from a tailgate party, but some are more serious flights designed to halt games, as happened with the decision to pause a 2023 football game between the Baltimore Ravens and Cincinnati Bengals.

“Knowing that you’re causing a disruption to the game is enough to get people excited to get their drones in the air,” Wagner said. Most drones have built-in features that block flights in restricted areas, which have often kept drones away in the past. “People have gotten smart enough and sophisticated enough to override their software on most commercial drones.”

Drones can crash into people or buildings, Wagner is more concerned about more dramatic problems like causing a panic in a crowded stadium or colliding with race cars or helicopters.

Dedrone’s technology works by detecting radio signals between drones and their pilots, though it can also integrate with other companies’ audio and visual detection. It also offers a radio signal jamming system that disrupts drones, sending them into a somewhat confused state in which they often return to their launch site.

Share

Recent Posts

1 billion identity records exposed in ID verification data leak

Things like your name, home address, date of birth and even your Social Security number…

2 weeks ago

Android fixes 129 security flaws in major phone update

Most people never think about Android security updates until a headline like this appears. Suddenly,…

2 weeks ago

Burger King AI listens to workers

The next time you pull up to the drive-thru at Burger King, you may notice…

2 weeks ago

Fake Google Gemini AI pushes ‘Google Coin’ crypto scam

You may think you can spot a crypto scam from a mile away. But what…

2 weeks ago

Tesla builds a car with no steering wheel. Now what?

The first Tesla Cybercab has officially rolled off the floor at Tesla Gigafactory Texas. And…

2 weeks ago

Meta smart glasses privacy concerns grow

Smart glasses promise a future where technology blends into everyday life. You can ask a…

2 weeks ago