0
  1. I am aware that I'm not allowed to shoot at someone's drone. However, what happens if my drone crashes into another drone? Is it treated like a car crash?

  2. What is the fastest and most efficient way to get rid of a drone?

This question is partly inspired by Randall Munroe's new book. I have no idea about law.

2 Answers2

1

What right to privacy?

To the extent that you have a right to privacy, you have to be in a private space and that right extends only to the extent that you are not observable from a public space. For example, you have a right to privacy in your bedroom if you close the curtains.

Any such space is almost certainly indoors where drones are unlikely to be an issue.

You can’t break other people’s stuff

You just can’t. If you do it negligently, you have to pay for it. If you do it deliberately, you have to pay for it and you’re committing a crime.

What you can do

Drone use is increasingly regulated. If they are breaching the regulations, report it to the regulator.

It’s possible that you could succeed in a nuisance suit if you can identify the operator.

Dale M
  • 237,717
  • 18
  • 273
  • 546
-1

Drones have no rights. Owners of drones may have the right that nobody destroys their property without a very good reason.

gnasher729
  • 35,915
  • 2
  • 51
  • 94