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Today marks the âeffective dateâ that some pertinent Part 107 and Remote ID rules become active in the United States. Notably, this includes the Operations Over People rule. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) first published their Notice for Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for the Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (Remote ID) on December 29, 2020.
Simply put, Remote ID is the concept that every drone should have a digital license plate. This creates a uniform system for authorities to track who is operating a specific unmanned aerial vehicle, through a serial number, at any given time. The objective is to increase transparency and improve the public s opinion of drones. Most importantly, the FAA want to ease certain restrictions and make more complex operations possible for remote pilots.
Российские аптеки отказываются от феназепама из-за новых правил
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Профессор МФТИ арестован по подозрению в госизмене
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On January 15, 2021, the Federal Aviation Administration
( FAA ) issued two significant final rules: the Remote Identification of Unmanned
Aircraft ( UA ) rule and the Operation of Small UA Systems Over
People rule. These are the first significant UA
regulations from the FAA since 2016, and are important steps to
increasing and regularizing commercial drone use in the United
States.
First, the Remote Identification ( Remote ID ) of UA
rule seeks to address law enforcement and public interest
groups concerns by providing a way to identify drones and
their operators. The rule sets three categories of drones with
AVweb
The FAA has announced that the final rules covering remote identification of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS/drones) and drone operations over people will now go into effect on April 21, 2021. The original effective date for both rules was March 16, 60 days after they were published in the Federal Register. According to the FAA, the date was pushed back to “afford the President’s appointees or designees an opportunity to review the rule and … allow for consideration of any questions of fact, law, or policy that the rule may raise before it becomes effective.”
The Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft rule requires drones in flight to broadcast identification and location information along with requiring similar location data from the aircraft’s control station or takeoff point. Unmanned aircraft operating at FAA-recognized identification areas (FRIAs) are exempt from Remote ID requirements. While the Remote ID rule goes into effect on April 21,