A Chinese city's police department is Female Instructor’s Strange Private Lesson (2025)arming itself with more than 20 drone-jamming rifles to crack down on illegal drone flights.
SEE ALSO: Use Jedi mind tricks to command this dronePolice in Wuhan, central China , are going to be equipped with 20 of these rifles, which work by emitting radio signals that force the drones to land purportedly without damaging them.
The drone-killing rifles will be used during the upcoming 2017 Wuhan Marathon, to raise security.
Wuhan police demonstrated the drone-killing rifles last week, where they shot down six drones, according to the Chutian Metropolitan Daily.
The rifles don't come cheap, at 250,000 yuan ($36,265) each, and they will have a range of roughly 1 km (0.6 miles).
Unauthorised drone flights have disrupted airport safety in China, as well as large-scale events, according to the Wuhan police.
Earlier this year, a drone pilot in Hangzhou was arrested for flying a DJI Mavic Pro dangerously near civilian airliners. And in Hong Kong, three operators were arrested for flying a drone over a Formula E event.
Operators of drones that are more than 7kg have to be licensed, according to draft law issued by the Civil Aviation Administration of China in 2015. Rules are generally more relaxed in rural China than in urban, built-up areas, but drones must keep out of restricted airspace and follow rules set by the military and the government.
The new rules also forbid deliveries made by drone in built-up, urban areas, and require all drones to register to their place of manufacture, weight and maximum altitude before they are allowed to take off.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Scientists find supercolony of penguins on the remote Danger Islands
Here's what the internet had to say about Trump and the Easter Bunny
U.S. wireless carriers face $200 million in FCC fines for mishandling customer data
Kendall Jenner is proving just how meaningless everything she does is
Best smartwatch deal: Save 44% on CMF Watch Pro for $38.90 at Amazon
Not above the law: Steven Seagal's shady crypto past under siege by SEC
Facebook now lets you create 3D photos without a portrait mode camera
New Star Wars book plugs one of the big 'Rise of Skywalker' plot holes
The Beatles biopic casts all the internet's boyfriends in one movie
Uber launches new translation tool with more than 100 languages
Tennessee vs. Kentucky 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free
Facebook now lets you create 3D photos without a portrait mode camera
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。