Obama said drones, properly used, have the potential to empower people in ways unimaginable just a decade ago. He said the federal government is playing catch-up to ensure they will be used safely in the US and don't violate privacy.
"We don't yet have the legal structures and the architecture both globally and within individual countries to manage them the way that we need to," Obama said in a CNN interview. He said part of his job in his final two years in office "is seeing if we can start providing some sort of framework that ensures that we get the good and minimize the bad."
The drone-control debate has hit uncomfortably close to home for Obama, thanks to an apparently hapless hobbyist who later stepped forward to own up to a big mistake. Questions persist about why a night-owl drone operator would be flying it within range of the White House at 3 a.M. On Monday, but the Secret Service's early investigation suggested he meant no harm.
The episode unfolded with the Obama administration on the verge of proposing rules for drone operations that would replace an existing ban on most commercial flights. Hobbyists can fly drones, but must keep them under 120 meters in altitude, 5 miles (8 kilometres) from an airport, always within sight and not within a highly populated area. Only a small number of companies can use them for inspections and aerial photography.
The Federal Aviation Administration had wanted to release proposed rules for drones by the end of 2014. To the dismay of the drone industry, that process is now dragging into 2015. Even after rules are proposed, it is likely to be two or three years before regulations become final.
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