Illustrating the potential problems that totally unskilled drone drivers can create was a You Tube or similar clip a while back, where a drone driver discovered that wind up there might be stronger and in a different direcion to wind down here. He basically flew into a cloud and it wandered off, its automatic position keeping not being man enough for the job. His fanbase were largely concerned by the damage it sustained after its final plummet. No worries about the tree it bounced off, nobody had a thought that if it had been a road rather than a tree it could have been a very different story.
Back when crystal control radios were the norm, you had to have some idea what was going on before you started operating. The automation that is galloping into electronic devices means that the skill threshold required to operate models is dropping sharply. As the prices also drop, the market is opened to a much wider base who don't want to know about their responsibilities when operating what can be a dangerous item in public, and mostly don't even realise that such responsibilities exist.