Drones for security site assessment
We will not help you “test” whether someone can trespass, bypass alarms, or defeat locks. We will help responsible stakeholders understand what is visible from public-adjacent airspace and how terrain, vegetation, and lighting change that picture — the same way a walkthrough informs camera placement, only from elevations humans rarely occupy on foot.
Line-of-sight and blind spots
Security cameras and guards share a weakness: corners, berms, and building massing create occlusions. Aerial stills taken from legally accessible positions can support conversations about coverage gaps without dramatizing adversarial scenarios. Technical framing overlaps with line of sight and physical site planning.
Ethics, privacy, and permission
Properties deserve notice and consent pathways. We decline missions that pressure peering into residential windows or circumventing posted rules. Your legal counsel sets policy; we implement capture conservatively.
Regulatory humility
Airspace still belongs to the public aviation system; the FAA’s commercial small UAS materials are the starting point for how flights are conducted lawfully in the United States. Local ordinances may add constraints.