TIME

China Is Interested in the Data Collected By Consumer Drones

DJI Drones at SZ DJI Technology Co. Headquarters As Company Said To Be Willing to Share Drones' Data With Chinese Government
Bloomberg/Getty Images A DJI Inspire 1 Pro drone is flown during a demonstration at the SZ DJI Technology Co. headquarters in Shenzhen, China, April 20, 2016

Could your drone be spying for Beijing one day?

The consumer drones that opened the skies to the public may one day be giving a bird’s eye view to Chinese authorities.

Chinese drone maker DJI — the world’s largest maker of small drones — said it was in talks with Chinese officials who want access to the data collected by its products, Bloomberg reports. That data could include flight records, GPS information and even video.

Whether this applied to Chinese customers only, or customers in Europe and the U.S., has not been made fully clear.

“Should DJI receive a valid legal request from a government agency,” spokesperson Oliver Wang said in a statement to media, “we may provide user information to that agency, just as other companies do. That is the case in the U.S., China or anywhere in the world.”

Another DJI spokesman, Adam Najberg, emphasized that the company presently did not have a way of viewing video from drones it has sold, beyond what buyers upload themselves via the DJI social media app.

According to the New York Times, the DJI user agreement already warns customers that “if you conduct your flight in certain countries, your flight data might be monitored and provided to the government authorities according to local regulatory laws.” Users are also told that their data could be transferred between U.S. and Chinese servers.

Civilian drones might be the latest node in China’s extensive network of digital surveillance and control. The country already blocks any content considered too sensitive — Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and Instagram. It has also asked foreign technology companies to let authorities spy on their users. Large companies like Apple also routinely comply with official Chinese requests for data.

[Bloomberg]

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