Aerial and Drone Surveillance: 2024 in Review

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We’ve been fighting against aerial surveillance for decades because we recognize the immense threat from Big Brother in the sky. Even if you’re behind within the confines of your backyard, you are exposed to eyes from above.

Aerial surveillance was first conducted with manned aircrafts, which the Supreme Court held was permissible without a warrant in a couple of cases the 1980s. But, as we’ve argued to courts, drones have changed the equation. Drones were a technology developed by the military before it was adopted by domestic law enforcement. And in the past decade, commercial drone makers began marketing to civilians, making drones ubiquitous in our lives and exposing us to be watched by from above by the government and our neighbors. But we believe that when we’re in the constitutionally protected areas of backyards or homes, we have the right to privacy, no matter how technology has advanced. 

This year, we focused on fighting back against aerial surveillance facilitated by advancement in these

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