Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Public Privacy Conundrum – Anonymity and the Law in an Era of Mass Surveillance
- Chapter 2 Undesirable Types – The Surveillance of Journalists
- Chapter 3 Surveillance and National Security ‘Hyper- Legislation’ – Calibrating Restraints on Rights with a Freedom of Expression Threshold
- Chapter 4 The Ethics of Reporting National Security Matters
- Chapter 5 When One Person's Noble Whistleblower Becomes Another's Poisonous Leaker
- Chapter 6 Who Watches the Watchmen? Access to Information, Accountability and Government Secrecy
- Chapter 7 Eyes and Ears in the Sky – Drones and Mass Surveillance
- Chapter 8 Looking over My Shoulder – Public Perceptions of Surveillance
- Chapter 9 Journalism and National Security in Three BISA Countries – Brazil, India and South Africa
- Chapter 10 Journalism and National Security in the European Union
- Chapter 11 The Security Reporter Today – Journalists and Journalism in an Age of Surveillance
- Conclusion: Journalism and the State of Exception
- Contributors
- Index
Chapter 7 - Eyes and Ears in the Sky – Drones and Mass Surveillance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 June 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Public Privacy Conundrum – Anonymity and the Law in an Era of Mass Surveillance
- Chapter 2 Undesirable Types – The Surveillance of Journalists
- Chapter 3 Surveillance and National Security ‘Hyper- Legislation’ – Calibrating Restraints on Rights with a Freedom of Expression Threshold
- Chapter 4 The Ethics of Reporting National Security Matters
- Chapter 5 When One Person's Noble Whistleblower Becomes Another's Poisonous Leaker
- Chapter 6 Who Watches the Watchmen? Access to Information, Accountability and Government Secrecy
- Chapter 7 Eyes and Ears in the Sky – Drones and Mass Surveillance
- Chapter 8 Looking over My Shoulder – Public Perceptions of Surveillance
- Chapter 9 Journalism and National Security in Three BISA Countries – Brazil, India and South Africa
- Chapter 10 Journalism and National Security in the European Union
- Chapter 11 The Security Reporter Today – Journalists and Journalism in an Age of Surveillance
- Conclusion: Journalism and the State of Exception
- Contributors
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) or drones, as they are commonly known, for surveillance purposes and for lethal operations against suspected terrorist targets was at the centre of United States counterterrorism policy during Barack Obama's two- term presidency, and is now being continued by Donald Trump's administration. While the US use of drones, especially for so- called targeted killings, has been the most discussed and controversial use of drone technology, their use for non- military purposes is becoming increasingly commonplace. Drones in all shapes and sizes are entering our skies, raising serious questions about how they are being used, by whom, for what purposes and with what consequences.
For journalists, drones pose a range of challenging questions. At the lethal end of official government drone usage, how can journalists verify what has or has not been executed with a weaponised drone when their deployment is still largely shrouded in secrecy and their effects often too remote geographically for reliable accounting after the fact? How might journalists themselves use drone technology to access visuals or sound recordings that they would otherwise not be able to reach? What does this technology do to privacy, to public safety and to civil rights whether being used by government, by journalists or by private companies? How might journalists themselves be targeted with drones to expose their work and potentially undermine their freedom to gather information and investigate government or private sector practices?
This chapter will engage with the wide range of drone technology applications by the military, police, government agencies, private sector companies and individuals to ask what will happen as drones become more ubiquitous over the skies of the United States, Britain, Australia and other countries.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- In the Name of Security - Secrecy, Surveillance and Journalism , pp. 139 - 158Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2018