DJI, a Chinese-based technology company, got rid of its geofence software, which stopped people from flying drones over the ...
The drone maker is removing software restraints that prevented its products from flying over restricted areas, ceding control to drone pilots.
DJI has lifted its geofence that prevents users in the US from flying over restricted areas like nuclear power plants, airports and wildfires, the company wrote in a blog post on Monday. As of January ...
Less than a month after drone swarms haunted New Jersey’s night skies, DJI removed the geofencing features that finally ended ...
In a bold move, DJI says it will no longer enforce its No-Fly Zones, meaning safety is up to the individual users.
The world's largest drone manufacturer changed software that once prevented drones from flying in restricted airspace.
DJI will no longer stop drones from flying over airports, wildfires, and the White House, passing the buck to US law ...
DJI, which accounts for an estimated 90% of hobby drone sales in the U.S., announced this week that it will stop geoblocking ...
In a blog post published this week, DJI said it was doing away with geofenced No Fly Zones and replacing them with “enhanced warning zones,” maintained by the Federal Aviation Administration.