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Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

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Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

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Old 10-19-2007 | 09:57 PM
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Default Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

I don't have the actual newspaper source, but this is what I copied from it when it was open to nonsubscribers:

Wired editor flies into security kerfuffle
By Matt Krupnick
STAFF WRITER
Article Launched: 10/12/2007 04:46:22 PM PDT



Not even the bucolic Berkeley hills are immune to security concerns in a post-Sept. 11 world, as the editor in chief of Wired magazine has discovered.

Chris Anderson, a 45-year-old Berkeley resident and aerial-reconnaissance enthusiast, sparked a minor security scare Sunday when his remote-controlled plane - equipped with a camera - crashed into a tree at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.

Security personnel apparently didn't notice the plane until Anderson asked for help retrieving it, but they've taken notice since. UC Berkeley police are investigating and federal authorities may be notified about the breach at the hillside lab, which is owned by the U.S. Department of Energy and managed by the university. Unlike UC-managed labs at Livermore and Los Alamos, Berkeley is not involved with nuclear weapons and does not conduct classfied research.

It does have important equipment that needs to be protected, said Dan Lunsford, who manages lab security.
"I think, post-9/11, when we see an event that is out of the ordinary, those are things that gain our interest," Lunsford said. "The greatest thing right now in the war on terrorism is prevention."
Anderson, who lives within walking distance of the lab, does not appear to have broken any laws, Lunsford said. In fact, Anderson said, firefighters helped him get the 4-ounce foam plane back when he came calling at the lab's front gate.

"They were incredibly nice about it," he said. The flight was an attempt to take photos of the unusual architecture of the lab's cyclotron, a mostly round particle accelerator. The photos were to be posted on his personal Web site, diydrones.com, devoted to unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones.
Instead, Anderson, whose children took turns piloting the plane, ended up with a partial photo of the cyclotron and a blog entry titled: "Lesson: Don't fly planes over secure national labs!"
Anderson, who worked at Los Alamos lab in New Mexico, acknowledged he should have known better than to take the close-up aerial photos.

"I promise not to fly over secure national labs anymore," he said.

Lunsford said he would rather be safe than sorry. "What could have been simply someone having fun in the hills of Berkeley has become an incident that we just want to validate as harmless," Lunsford said.
"There was no cloak-and-dagger stuff here. But we're going to err on the side of safety."
Old 10-20-2007 | 07:25 PM
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Default RE: Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

One could end up spending a lot of time in a federal "detention" faciity this way. Well out of sight and touch with your personal legal advisor.....
Old 10-22-2007 | 04:38 PM
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Default RE: Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

Only in CA.
Old 10-25-2007 | 10:53 AM
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Default RE: Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

Not true. Anywhere in the country. If people don't believe that one can suddenly "dissapear" in America they are just a little naive. Trying to get into the right (wrong) places can get one quite dead with zero fanfare very quickly.
Old 10-31-2007 | 03:55 PM
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Default RE: Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

I just worry about non-events striking the fancy of someone with political aspirations expoiting it for
face time n CNN!!!
Old 11-05-2007 | 12:55 AM
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Default RE: Wired! magazine editor and his UAV

He's well know in that community, Joe bag of doughnuts may have had a different take...

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