Just when every American and their mother, it seems, has figured out a way to get their hands on an amateur drone and send it skyward, techies have figured out a way to force them back to earth.
And unlike most other counter-drone weapons previously released, the device that Jonathan Andersson with Trend Micro’s TippingPoint DVLab unveiled this week at the PacSec 2016 security conference in Tokyo isn’t simply a frequency jammer that knocks out communication between the remote control and the drone its user is flying, according to a post in ArsTechnica …
San Jose (CA) Mercury News Silcon Beat | Oct. 28, 2016