Deploy the Taco Copters! Trump Administration Looks to Loosen Drone Regulations
The Department of Transportation will experiment with expanding what commercial uses are allowed.

Will adorable little flying delivery machines soon be descending on your neighborhood with food, booze, and other products on demand?
Maybe, maybe not. But there's a chance! This week President Donald Trump released a memo to the Department of Transportation directing Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao to look for ways to expand the use of commercial drones domestically.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) notoriously dragged its feet in developing regulations overseeing commercial drone use in American airspace, and it tried (and failed) to enforce a blanket ban in the meantime. When the FAA finally released proposed rules in 2015, the guidelines were extremely restrictive. They limited drone use to daylight hours, required them to fly below 500 feet, and required that the drone operator remain within visual sight line of the drone itself.
At the time those rules were first released, companies like Amazon said the FAA's demands would make delivery drones impossible within the United States. Since then we've seen efforts to scale back the rules' severity.
The memo calls on the Department of Transportation to work with a handful of local governments and private companies to experiment with currently forbidden drone operations. From a Department of Transportation statement:
The pilot program will evaluate a variety of operational concepts, including night operations, flights over people, flights beyond the pilot's line of sight, package delivery, detect-and-avoid technologies, counter-[drone] security operations, and the reliability and security of data links between pilot and aircraft. Industries that could see immediate opportunities from the program include commerce, photography, emergency management, precision agriculture, and infrastructure inspections and monitoring.
This is hardly going to be the wild west of commercial drones. They're looking at proposals and considering a minimum of five partnerships.
Nevertheless, it's a very strong indication that someday we will indeed see much more significant use of drones for commercial purposes. The skies will open up and the tacos will come raining down. Make mine al pastor, please.
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This is a deeply problematic title, Scott.
Funny, but yeah
As we all know at this point. I refuse to recognize humor in any form.
I thought taco copter was your nickname at Mexican culinary school
I leaned to cook Mexican food on the streets, from my ex's Nana.
I thought taco copter was when BUCS spins his girlfriend around by her hair.
I would never do anything so boorish. I am the most gentile member of this forum, and I will refuse to let my kindness be slandered.
most gentile
Oy gevalt!
As SIV has taught us, there is little worse than being a Jew.
Also, from now on, i am referring to the sex act as "letting my kindness be slandered."
SIV loves his chickens so much, he is killing them with kindness.
A 12-gauge loaded with birdshot seems like the right solution, but using that in the open in an urban setting would probably cause more trouble. What are y'alls thoughts on something like a compressed-air net or bolo cannon?
I'm leaning more towards some sort of signal jammer, or perhaps a well-trained falcon.
Both elegant solutions, although the latter would require time and resources for training and upkeep.
Slingshots.
Boob shirt and a can of silly string
There's a significant time investment on the front end for training, but as far as upkeep goes, the falcon can just eat the captured tacos.
Plus, what impresses ladies more: "Oh I'm a gun owner, womp womp." OR "S'up bitches, I'm a falconer. Come suckle on my weenis."?
There are actually quite a few female falconers.
That kind of tangential pedantry is why your love life is a horrific shambles.
So more evidence that this is a great way to meet women.
How about rock salt instead of bird shot?
I'm not sure rock salt has the penetrating power to deliver the results, and I'm not sure the cops would care what the cartridge was loaded with.
I agree with the air canon net approach. This lets you capture the food then release the drone back into the wild unharmed.
Not sure how effective that would be
Bird shot effectiveness greatly diminishes beyond about 30-40 yards.
Luftv?rnskanonvagn 9040. Go big or go home.
Taco Copter was my nickname in flight school.
tsk, I went with the more wholesome euphemism
Loose Drone was mine.
Trump rolling back regulations? Waiting for the inevitable outcry and beard rending from the Democrats and snowflake crowd in three... two... one...
I'll copter your taco.
The Obama administration was way more forward thinking when it came to using drones to deliver stuff to people. Particularly in the middle east.