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mahatmakanejeeves

(63,928 posts)
Wed Mar 5, 2025, 02:11 PM Mar 5

Amazon's Delivery Drones Are Grounded. The Birds and Dogs of This Texas Town Are Grateful

Paresh Dave * Business * Mar 3, 2025 7:00 AM

Amazon’s Delivery Drones Are Grounded. The Birds and Dogs of This Texas Town Are Grateful
Amazon’s drones met more resistance in College Station, Texas, than in any other city in the US. Now they’re gone—and a sense of peace and privacy has been restored.

As the spring planting season arrives in College Station, Texas, certified master gardener Mark Smith is thrilled that peace is in the air. This time last year, a loud buzzing noise began disrupting Smith’s morning routine of checking on the peppers, tomatoes, herbs, and shrubs growing in his backyard. Several times an hour, an Amazon Prime Air delivery drone would noisily emerge about 800 feet away, just past a line of trees behind Smith’s home. His neighbors began calling the fleet flying chainsaws. Smith, a retired civil engineer, preferred a different comparison: “It was like your neighbor runs their leaf blower all day long,” he says. “It was just incessant.”

Amid technical and regulatory challenges, Amazon’s decade-plus quest to fly small items such as toothpaste and batteries to people’s yards in under an hour has yielded just thousands of deliveries. The experience in College Station has highlighted another challenge: NIMBYs—or people who push for developments to be “not in my backyard”—potentially curtailing where Amazon operates.

Over the past few years, drone delivery companies have started operating in several towns and cities across the US without much fuss. The Federal Aviation Administration conducted environmental reviews of 21 planned drone rollouts over the past four years, none of which received more than three critical public comments or any organized opposition—except for one location.

In College Station, a university town of about 125,000 people, hundreds of ordinary residents along with the mayor and other officials banded together last year to oppose Amazon’s proposal to more than double the number of daily local drone flights. The FAA received about 150 comments opposing the plans, including from homeowners’ associations and other groups.

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Amazon's Delivery Drones Are Grounded. The Birds and Dogs of This Texas Town Are Grateful (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Mar 5 OP
Congrats to Austin residents. May others throughout the country be similar so... I've had it with the hlthe2b Mar 5 #1
A weaponized drone will one day change American culture. Simeon Salus Mar 5 #2
Drones can be hacked and turned into weapons which IMO is why any commercial use should not be allowed. cstanleytech Mar 5 #3
Yup. OldBaldy1701E Mar 5 #4

hlthe2b

(108,856 posts)
1. Congrats to Austin residents. May others throughout the country be similar so... I've had it with the
Wed Mar 5, 2025, 02:19 PM
Mar 5

nearly total lack of regulation, overt intentional invasion of privacy (yup, talking to you, realtors and utility companies) and as far as I am concerned if I see one more harassing nearby wildlife (as is illegal in Colorado) I won't stop at a phone call to CO WIldlife officials to get them ticketed. I was present when a deer with a fawn broke her leg and had to be put down after being terrorized by these things. So, next time, I will make sure the police come out as well. So, yeah, that's my soapbox, but spare me stories of how wonderful they are and how they are your livelihood. Find a way to do it responsibly, or find another field.

Sorry, but I have absolutely HAD it with these tech scourges (and their operators profiting off of all these offenses). I give latitude to children, but adults and near-adult teens? Hell no.

Simeon Salus

(1,443 posts)
2. A weaponized drone will one day change American culture.
Wed Mar 5, 2025, 02:27 PM
Mar 5

And after the national tragedy, Republicans will blame immigrants.

cstanleytech

(27,495 posts)
3. Drones can be hacked and turned into weapons which IMO is why any commercial use should not be allowed.
Wed Mar 5, 2025, 03:13 PM
Mar 5

The same goes for self driving vehicles as they can be hacked into weapons.

OldBaldy1701E

(7,539 posts)
4. Yup.
Wed Mar 5, 2025, 03:18 PM
Mar 5

That is a major concern and yet this country just gets a major hard-on the second someone develops something that has either Smart technology or A.I.. They flock to it like sheep to the pasture.

Hell, look where we are now. Today, your phone is the only thing that will allow you to access you most delicate information without having to go through idiotic 'double identification' and/or other protections. If you manage to lose the thing before it goes into standby, you are done. I don't even leave most of my apps logged in.

Why in the world some people want to make being a victim of theft (or worse) so easy is beyond me.

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