Thank you for this very useful video. Does FlightHub2 support "point-and-click" real BVLOS piloting, from a command center, away from the theater of operations? I am doing a comparo with FlytBase (which has that capability). Thank you.
@@CANDRONE can the controllers be left a the command center and used from there (thru 4G/5G connection? (I'm abroad, where 4G/5G for drone piloting are legal though)
No the RC linked to the drone must be within range of the drone. It can not be remotely controlled through Flighthub. Flighthub is currently made for monitoring primarily. Look into the DJI Dock that was built for remote applications. candrone.com/collections/buy-dji-matrice-30-series-drone/products/dji-dock @@DakarBlues
3:32 The DJI technology is amazing, no doubt about that. But does anyone feel uneasy about streaming live mapping data to a Chinese government controlled cloud service? I personally think it’s a BAD idea. But people get so enamoured with their technology, they can’t see past their noses.
@@CANDRONE Thanks for the reply - mostly I find when I raise privacy & security issues of products presented on UA-cam, they get ignored. Really appreciate that you took the time to respond. That said - 'hosted on AWS' means nothing because Amazon doesn't control the security of the data and applications, only the security of the platform. So it's under complete control of whoever runs the service, i.e., DJI. Like any Chinese company, they are required by Chinese law to cooperate with the Chinese government and provide data on demand. That has been documented numerous times elsewhere. Whether they do it and to what extent is completely opaque to DJI users and security researches, so finding hard evidence will be difficult, and would probably only be applicable on a case-by-case basis. Good maps have historically always been of extreme strategic importance. They have won wars throughout history. High quality maps that DJI drones are capable of producing would be extremely valuable to Chinese government, so any assumption that they wouldn't be either asking DJI or being plugged into their system would be naive. Given the geopolitical and cybersecurity landscape of current times, I would always err on the side of caution, and as a cybersecurity professional I find it important to educate the public about these issues. By the way, I have found security & privacy issues with other Chinese products that are very popular in the off grid power market that kind of confirm the suspicion, although I have yet to verify my findings before it becomes the kind of evidence that people would take seriously. Either way, this is an important issue, and DJI users should be aware of the context in which they operate. For example, a Search & Rescue mission might be completely fine, but anything that has to do with sensitive information, such as Law Enforcement or critical infrastructure (power lines, pipelines), I would stay away from the DJI cloud service. As I said, the DJI technology is amazing, but that 'magic' we get on the consumer and commercial user side of it very likely doesn't match the capabilities on the other side of that technology, and we need to be aware of it. Cheers, looking forward to more of your videos.
@@luislongoria6621 Ah-ha-ha. This is a joke of the century. AWS has exactly zero control over what their customers do, and has nothing to do with the essential problem: DJI does collect huge amounts of data from the drones (even when no live streaming is involved), and nobody other than DJI knows where it goes and how it’s used. If course, DJI is not alone - most technology companies do it. But most tech is not obliged by the Chinese government to give them any data they ask for.
@@offgrid-boundChinese Democracy isn't just an unfinished album but Guns n' Roses/ Boots and Hoses. It's a preamble for all things outsourcing by virtue of the small government Republican ethos
Fantastic video! Thank you
Amazing improvement in the user interface and collaborative environment - very cool!
It really is!
Do you know if the DJI Flight hub 2 allows for a video recording to be buffered and then rewind that video that is being captured?
Looks amazing! What sort of data stream speeds does this need to be happy?
We were hot-spotting with LTE speeds, 5mb/s should be sufficient.
Thank you for this very useful video. Does FlightHub2 support "point-and-click" real BVLOS piloting, from a command center, away from the theater of operations? I am doing a comparo with FlytBase (which has that capability).
Thank you.
It does not have that capability at the moment.
@@CANDRONE can the controllers be left a the command center and used from there (thru 4G/5G connection? (I'm abroad, where 4G/5G for drone piloting are legal though)
No the RC linked to the drone must be within range of the drone. It can not be remotely controlled through Flighthub. Flighthub is currently made for monitoring primarily.
Look into the DJI Dock that was built for remote applications. candrone.com/collections/buy-dji-matrice-30-series-drone/products/dji-dock
@@DakarBlues
3:32 The DJI technology is amazing, no doubt about that. But does anyone feel uneasy about streaming live mapping data to a Chinese government controlled cloud service? I personally think it’s a BAD idea. But people get so enamoured with their technology, they can’t see past their noses.
DJI Flight hub is hosted by Amazon Web Services. Until there is evidence, we are here to test and recommend the best solutions for our clients.
@@CANDRONE Thanks for the reply - mostly I find when I raise privacy & security issues of products presented on UA-cam, they get ignored. Really appreciate that you took the time to respond.
That said - 'hosted on AWS' means nothing because Amazon doesn't control the security of the data and applications, only the security of the platform. So it's under complete control of whoever runs the service, i.e., DJI. Like any Chinese company, they are required by Chinese law to cooperate with the Chinese government and provide data on demand. That has been documented numerous times elsewhere. Whether they do it and to what extent is completely opaque to DJI users and security researches, so finding hard evidence will be difficult, and would probably only be applicable on a case-by-case basis. Good maps have historically always been of extreme strategic importance. They have won wars throughout history. High quality maps that DJI drones are capable of producing would be extremely valuable to Chinese government, so any assumption that they wouldn't be either asking DJI or being plugged into their system would be naive. Given the geopolitical and cybersecurity landscape of current times, I would always err on the side of caution, and as a cybersecurity professional I find it important to educate the public about these issues.
By the way, I have found security & privacy issues with other Chinese products that are very popular in the off grid power market that kind of confirm the suspicion, although I have yet to verify my findings before it becomes the kind of evidence that people would take seriously.
Either way, this is an important issue, and DJI users should be aware of the context in which they operate. For example, a Search & Rescue mission might be completely fine, but anything that has to do with sensitive information, such as Law Enforcement or critical infrastructure (power lines, pipelines), I would stay away from the DJI cloud service. As I said, the DJI technology is amazing, but that 'magic' we get on the consumer and commercial user side of it very likely doesn't match the capabilities on the other side of that technology, and we need to be aware of it.
Cheers, looking forward to more of your videos.
AWS is fully divested to comply with federal regulations
@@luislongoria6621 Ah-ha-ha. This is a joke of the century. AWS has exactly zero control over what their customers do, and has nothing to do with the essential problem: DJI does collect huge amounts of data from the drones (even when no live streaming is involved), and nobody other than DJI knows where it goes and how it’s used.
If course, DJI is not alone - most technology companies do it. But most tech is not obliged by the Chinese government to give them any data they ask for.
@@offgrid-boundChinese Democracy isn't just an unfinished album but Guns n' Roses/ Boots and Hoses. It's a preamble for all things outsourcing by virtue of the small government Republican ethos