I was in full agreement with icebike until you said:
We have strong reasons for disallowing of titles in this country.
And I found that point to be very powerful. We can hardly call ourselves an egalitarian society while we allow people to rack up titles from roles they no longer fill. In my mind I'm wondering what it could have looked like if Colin Powell had made a run for President back in the day, and people started referring to him as President-General.
I think the only title we really ought to allow people to keep is Mr. President. And even then because it's so rare for those guys to seek a lower office; ex-Presidents usually fill their time with speaking tours and an occasional foreign diplomacy mission.
I think we're getting down in the weeds on this.
I think that local law enforcement, or pilots, would look at this thing and say "gee, that looks pretty suspicious" (who would head out to a remote, windy, alpine area to fly recreational R/C aircraft?). Law enforcement might not be able to quote FAA regulations by heart, but they're sure going to report something that out of place when they get back to the office.
And as far as the capability to track it down, you're probably right that they're not going to trace it's signal back to the source. But in a remote area like this, it's pretty likely that local LEO's will have a short list of the locals that are capable of putting this kind of thing together.
Why would you assume cops in remote alpine areas are idiots? In a lot of (US) states remote areas like this are monitored by parks services, which are often subsets of State Police.
Plus, any local pilot who sees this thing is probably going to roughly what it is and if they don't like it, will raise hell with any authority they can reach.
I think he's got a great model here for developing a cheap method of monitoring and reporting on remote climbing/hiking areas. If he works in a way to publish is data in a manner that is useful to other people, he's got a shot.
You sound to me like a small startup investigating the viability of an idea that involves using unmanned aircraft to track seasonally changing terrain features in inaccessible areas.
That idea has some merit. Plenty of services exist, for example, to report on surfing conditions on beaches. Deployment there is easier because you only need to report on the conditions in a small fixed area. But the idea is transferable.
This drone reporting would be useful for reporting on remote climbing/hiking trails, off roading trails, and even a third party verification conditions at ski slopes. AFAIK most of that is done right now by helicopter. Which is expensive, and thus limited in scope. Drones could expand that.
The Sheriff might not. But local pilots might.
It's hard to say without knowing more about the location. But if this is an alpine environment with climbing/hiking trails, and possibly ski slopes, there are probably also regular helicopter flights to check out the very same information this guy wants to collect. Those guys might have a problem with an autonomous drone that they know nothing about.
My experience with hand tools is that they will get stolen or lost LONG before they will break. The lifetime warranty is great (in theory), but when somebody walks off with your wrench you still have to go out and buy a new one. There will always be a business for high quality hand tools.
I imagine most products would be fair game for small claims court - no lawyer needed. My first stop would probably be the Better Business Bureau.
This seems like a rare instance where the consumer has an edge over the retailer. You have all the time/resources to file BBB complaints, post flaming reviews, pursue arbitration, etc. For Apple or T-Mobile, the cost of replacing the questionably damaged product is worthwhile to avoid paying people to deal with those things.
Not to keep beating on Best Buy (not that they don't deserve it), but I see it happen there all the time. They'll scare customers with hypothetical repair quotes from their own service, which is vastly inflated over what you might get at an independent shop.
If I can expound on your comments, it's also not quite accurate to look at local economy figures as an indicator of wealth. Many 'poor' areas develop untrackable economies based on unreported labor, drug, and illegal liquor production. Despite being on-paper 'poor', many unregulated areas possess a surprising amount of wealth.
As an example, I grew up in a rural area of Maine. Though the area was 'poor' and didn't produce much tax revenue, many people supplemented their legal income by growing Marijuana. A lot of this money sits in cash stockpiles rather then reentering the local economy.
To spin this around I'll put on my Patriotic Freedom Hat (TM).
Americans have historically preferred that government not interfere with how people and corporations do business. This freedom to do business how we please traditionally places a responsibility on people to be careful about what arrangements they enter into. More recently people have begun agitating for government to protect people from their own stupidity and inability to understand they contracts they sign.
A person with Rights has an obligation to be responsible. If a free person remains willfully ignorant about the contractual relationships they sign they have nobody to blame but themselves.
So what's your point?
Having the freedom to not be forced into contracts doesn't grant you a magical right to force companies to offer the exact products and services that you want. If you don't like the terms of a contract, don't sign it. But you can't reasonably expect businesses to cater to your specific whims so that you can buy a subsidized cell phone.
... during the time between that request and the teacher denying it, that parent can see some of the teacher's FB content....If the teacher's friend tags them in a photo...the parent will see that content.
Facebook has implemented fixes to those bugs. For the privacy minded you can still prevent pending friends from accessing info, and set photo/location tags to require your permission before they go public.
I'm not trying to contradict your major point. Teachers should still be entitled to private lives. And Facebook has come a long way to help people protect that privacy (while farming their all of their personal data).
Disclaimer: "These opinions are my own, though for a small fee they be yours too." -- Dave Haynie