Commending Carlos Castro.
Georgia House creates a temporary study committee to review government use of foreign-made drones, security/privacy risks, procurement gaps, and possible policy changes.
Georgia House creates a temporary study committee to review government use of foreign-made drones, security/privacy risks, procurement gaps, and possible policy changes.
HR 817 creates a temporary House study committee to examine security, privacy, procurement, and policy issues related to governmental use of drones and unmanned aircraft — with a particular focus on drones and components originating from foreign adversaries. The resolution directs the committee to study risks (espionage, data collection, cyber intrusion, unauthorized surveillance, sabotage), procurement practices, data flows to foreign manufacturers, and coordination among federal, state, and local authorities for interdiction and public-safety responses. The committee may recommend legislative or other actions.
As a study resolution, HR 817 does not itself change law or procurement rules. Its principal effect is to generate findings and possible legislative recommendations on drone procurement, security protocols, data protection, and intergovernmental coordination — which could lead to future statutory proposals restricting use of certain foreign-made drones, changing procurement standards, or enhancing privacy/security safeguards.
The text of the resolution references Georgia law (Official Code of Georgia Annotated) and explicitly frames state-level policy. The accompanying sponsor list and some procedural labels match federal House formats. These elements appear inconsistent; readers should verify whether this version is a Georgia state House resolution or a congressional resolution in related records. Related companion measures listed: HR 833 and S 292.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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