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Cop Robot Gets Green Light From FCC
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The ham radio
community is not happy with Recon Scout.
That’s a
surveillance robot, marketed to police and fire departments by ReconRobotics.
The FCC Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau has allowed licenses for the
operation of the robots despite the protest of amateur radio supporters. Recon
Scout uses part of the 420–450 MHz band, where hams have a secondary
allocation.
Mitchell Lazarus of
the law firm Fletcher Heald & Hildreth highlights the debate in a blog post
and gives an update on the policy fight. (He describes the robot as a device
“the size of a beer can with a wheel on each end, and a TV camera peering
out.”) Hams, he wrote, think the device would cause interference and that they
might be blamed for any interference they caused to the robot.
Over the last couple
of years, Lazarus reports, the commission bureaus have backed the first
responders while limiting the use of the device to emergencies and
training. The FCC has continued to do so in recent findings. The staff now
has granted applications for authorization filed by a number of public safety
agencies, and denied objections from the ARRL and other filers.
“The amateurs are
not yet out of options,” Lazarus says; hams could appeal to the full commission
and on to an appeals court. “In the meantime, though, police and fire
departments around the country will have the benefit of the Recon Scout’s
lifesaving technology. As one police official put it, during early testing
of the device, ‘We don’t feel comfortable without this thing now.’”
Read Lazarus’post.
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