- Joined
- Jun 25, 2015
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So while DJI is acting like a dog chasing its tail its customer have to suffer.My guess is that as DJI release new versions of firmware to stay one step ahead of any hackers they will ground/limit flight until you upgrade to the latest version - they are keen to work on 'safety' with the governments around the world, they can't be seen to be sitting back whilst people are hacking into their firmware can they?
DJI needs to take the same attitude as car & gun makers that they make a safe product and its up to the buyer to use it responsibly instead of selling a product and then changing the rules as they wish.I would suggest that DJI are chasing their tails because they want to keep the FAA and legislators happy so that their market is not damaged - hackers tend not to give a stuff about their actions.
The last thing DJI will want is one of their drones to be the one that makes the news when it crashes into something or injures somebody - the blame would immediately fall with them not the pilot. If it was proved to be hacked, it would be their fault that the software could be hacked etc etc
Trying to circumvent rules and regulations which are put in place to protect us all is what is screwing this whole thing up - don't blame DJI as they are just trying to keep their market share.
DJi could easily release a patch a week to stop hackers and dress it up as a no fly zone update
We have to remember that we get to use airspace as a privilege not a right.
DJI needs to take the same attitude as car & gun makers that they make a safe product and its up to the buyer to use it responsibly instead of selling a product and then changing the rules as they wish.
Your really starting to sound like a broken record,Crap analogy - car manufacturers restrict how you use their products (max speed limited, ABS brakes, traction control, stability systems etc). they also regularly recall cars for both software and hardware updates - would you ignore those if you thought they represented a safety risk.
Both guns and cars require licences, insurance and are covered by strict laws which if you decide to ignore carry severe penalties.
If drones were covered by a similar licencing system and enforcement, I doubt that we would be having this conversation.
Your really starting to sound like a broken record,
maybe because you keep coming up with the same ridiculous arguments![]()
hello andy_k
new firmware for what AC cause I'm the DJI forums can't see any info .. but I'm not surprise cause if they put a new firmware they going try to crack it . DJI as a battle in there hands cause it seems they hacked the go app too. so for now I'm not going to upgrade firmware for app for a while . turn off my wifi off on my iPad so far i been flying with no problems.
I didn't say there was new firmware yet, I'm just saying that if they want to stay ahead of the hackers they may go that way - currently, they seem to have removed all the old versions from the servers so that we can't roll back.
As long as you don't update and as long as DJI don't make it mandatory then you can carry on flying on the old firmware - unless you are flying commercially when your licence/insurance may well specify running on the latest firmware.
The end user licence we all accepted allows DJI to make changes to their firmware even though it's running on your machine.
Interesting times
Its pretty amazing the lengths that owners must go thru just to be able to fly their drones just because a company wants to change the rules mid-game.so for now I'm not going to upgrade firmware for app for a while . turn off my wifi off on my iPad so far i been flying with no problems.
Try to keep up ,the reason he's leaving it off is he's scared he'll receive a firmware update automatically. Duh.Its really not difficult to turn on and off your wifi settings as needed. But I guess thats pretty amazing to some. c'mon really?
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