By Tom Farrier, Chair, ISASI Unmanned Aircraft Systems Working Group. Originally published on Quora.

I edited the original question simply because it contained an embedded assumption that “drone = bad.” Lots of people have lots of ingenious ideas associated with new uses for unmanned aircraft, especially at the small end of the size spectrum (officially, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration defines those as weighing less than 55 pounds).

However, four basic types of concerns are being raised, each of which is valid and requires conscious addressal before everybody jumps on the drone bandwagon:

In the next few years I expect to see hundreds, if not thousands of aggrieved hobbyists demanding their right to fly their noisy, intrusive toys wherever they want because Congress said they can and their lobbyists will fight to defend their right to do so. Balderdash. Where drone flying adversely affects somebody else, the drone operators have no such “rights” — “Your right to swing your arm stops at my nose,” etc.

The public skies are just like the public airwaves. Amateur (“ham”) radio operators have to be licensed to broadcast because of the possible adverse effects they can have on others while making use of a public resource. Drone flyers can have the same effects, and should have no right simply to fly at will. Instead, many of them assert comprehensive rights, and fight for (and celebrate) their total lack of accountability. (For example, a really good summary of the reason why the FAA was ordered to stop registering “hobby and recreational” drones is at Court Ruling: The FAA Can’t Make You Register Your Drone.)

In the first two cases above, the key to addressing the concerns is mitigation of the safety and security threats posed by drones, that is, making sure protections against them have been satisfactorily provided for. The third and the fourth, candidly, require maturity and self-discipline that are asserted to be universal by drone advocates but that routinely are proven lacking by morons with a few hundred bucks to spend.

The genie is out of the bottle; the barn door is a’ swingin’ as the horse gallops down the street. Drones are here to stay. Their continued misuse — or escalations in the impact of their misuse — will be the only way a path will be found and a balance struck between legitimate concerns and oblivious operators.

By Tom Farrier, Chair, ISASI Unmanned Aircraft Systems Working Group. Originally published on Quora.

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