• fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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    5 days ago

    The drones, stored in secure boxes on campus, can be deployed within five seconds of silent panic buttons being activated. The devices—operated remotely by a team in Texas—provide constant live video feeds to first responders and, in some cases, fire nonlethal projectiles to delay or incapacitate an assailant.

    To me, these aren’t a bad idea. Immediate response and non-ISH-lethal. They are simply the progression of enforcement technology.

    What they are not, is a solution to school shootings. They are not even a bandaid. Some people (law makers) just don’t seem to know what “prevention” means.

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      5 days ago

      You said

      To me, these aren’t a bad idea.

      and yet you also said

      The devices—operated remotely by a team in Texas

      in the very same post.

      I wouldn’t want some bored trigger happy gun nutjob from Texas playing shoot the bad guys with pepper spray on a games console where my kids and their multi ethnic friends are the NPCs.

      • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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        5 days ago

        That’s a fair assessment. I’m guessing it’s that way because that’s where the company that operates this is. Which, now that I think about it, probably is a poor way to manage the whole program.

        So I’ll post-edit to say: “with local pilot and oversight”

    • jj4211@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      stored in secure boxes on campus, can be deployed within five seconds of silent panic buttons being activated

      So much about that sentence doesn’t make sense though…

      “secure boxes” but “a button can open them” also “silent panic” with “drones out within 5 seconds”

      In any event, the ‘nonlethal’ is generally considered a bad descriptor versus ‘less than lethal’, unless they are talking about something merely mildly annoying rather than the usual things like rubber or bag rounds.