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Drone Technology Daily: UAV News & Reviews

DJI Drones Grounded by 2025? FCC and DOD Threaten Ban Amid Security Concerns

21 Nov 2025

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This is you Drone Technology Daily: UAV News & Reviews podcast.Welcome to Drone Technology Daily from Quiet Please, where innovation and regulation converge to shape this rapidly evolving sector. The past 24 hours brought significant news for the drone world, anchored by the National Institute of Technology Rourkela’s announcement of a major breakthrough in real-time land mapping. Researchers there unveiled BHU-MANACHITRA, a lightweight artificial intelligence-powered drone platform that performs onboard image analysis and generates detailed land maps—entirely offline. The lightweight neural design ensures minimal power draw, making it ideal for long-duration flights, particularly in remote or disaster-stricken areas. It stands out by providing immediate, accurate assessments of land use, crop health, and urban expansion, strongly enhancing environmental monitoring and smart city planning.On the regulatory front, United States authorities are pushing forward with comprehensive enforcement of Remote Identification, now mandatory for all drones over 250 grams. Drones either need built-in broadcast capabilities or an add-on module, with the only exception being FAA-Recognized Identification Areas, typically reserved for sanctioned model aircraft clubs. The Federal Aviation Administration also strengthened requirements on beyond-visual-line-of-sight operations, urging commercial pilots to maintain updated Part 107 certifications. In an even more impactful turn, the Federal Communications Commission and Department of Defense are potentially set to ban new DJI drones by late December 2025 unless a national security audit is completed. If enforced, the ban could drastically reshape commercial and consumer markets, as DJI currently commands more than seventy percent of global drone shipments according to 2025 market estimates.For enterprise listeners, Swatter Company in Portugal just demonstrated the Swatter Portable Gun, an anti-drone device that uses advanced radiofrequency technology to neutralize unauthorized aircraft across ten frequency bands. This tool has been trialed in complex operational environments and lauded for portability, operational flexibility, and its integration of modular antennas and artificial intelligence. As critical infrastructure protection remains a growing focus, the United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency released new guidance detailing best practices on unmanned aircraft system detection, incident reporting, and drone threat mitigation, further underscoring the rising importance of airspace security at public and private facilities.Turning to a hands-on review, agricultural drones are reaching new maturity levels this season, with models such as the XAG V40 and DJI Agras T50 pushing boundaries in payload, flight automation, and environmental sensing. The V40 boasts dual-rotor design and adaptive spraying, while the Agras T50 offers robust obstacle avoidance and extended battery life—making both viable choices for precision agriculture and autonomous large-scale field surveillance. For professionals, look for integration with cloud-based crop monitoring software and compatibility with variable-rate application maps. Leading experts agree: enterprises anticipating regulatory shifts and investing in scalable, compliant platforms will be best positioned to capture growth as agricultural drone spending is projected to reach nine billion dollars globally by next year, according to Farm Progress.Flight safety always comes first. Commercial and recreational pilots should perform detailed pre-flight checks, continuously monitor airspace using tools like FAA’s B4UFLY app, and never exceed four hundred feet in altitude. Always maintain visual line-of-sight, avoid crowded areas, and double-check all firmware and Remote ID updates before takeoff.Looking ahead, trends indicate that lightweight onboard artificial intelligence, support for autonomous BVLOS operations, and robust counter-drone technologies will define the sector’s next wave. With regulatory scrutiny intensifying and technical capabilities expanding, the intersection of compliance, security, and innovation suggests both new opportunities and responsibilities for operators everywhere.Thanks for tuning in to Drone Technology Daily. Come back next week for more cutting-edge updates. This has been a Quiet Please production—learn more at Quiet Please Dot A I.For more http://www.quietplease.aiGet the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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