“Anti-drone weapons fall into two camps. There are complicated, elaborate tracking systems that follow the small, unmanned vehicles and then jam their sensors and signals, sending them crashing to the ground. And then there are the nets, wielded by either humans on the ground or, increasingly, other robots in the air. Tokyo even has a dedicated anti-drone police squad with a net drone. Michigan Tech’s Drone-Catcher is the latest net-wielding drone-hunting drone.”
By: Kelsey D. Atherton | January 12, 2016 | Popular Science
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