The ability of unmanned aerial vehicles to fly legally over fences, walls and property lines is disrupting more than just the few industries that use drones commercially.
As the drone market grows, so does the anti-drone market. The market for products that track, trap or break unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) is growing alongside the market for drones, much of it driven by fear that UAVs could be weaponized by terrorists or used as platforms for corporate espionage.
This is less far-fetched than it sounds. One tech industry executive told Semiconductor Engineering that he recently found a drone hovering outside his 45th-floor hotel room in Shanghai. He immediately closed his laptop computer.
“There is a laundry list, more than 200 companies, making counter-drone
systems of one kind or another, and they do market mitigation
capabilities that most people can’t use,” Michael Blades said. “But drones are
cheap to get, easy to fly, and are not always easy to see. So if a
company is concerned about trade secrets, or even just about the
security to know if there’s anyone around taking pictures, they might
look into countermeasures.” more