Amazon considering launching neighbourhood patrol drones, patent suggests

Could Amazon spy on your home? Tech giant's plans for neighbourhood patrol drones spark fears they could be used to collect data Big Brother-style Amazon may set up subscription service for homeowners using delivery drones Drones, fitted with night-vision or infrared cameras, could fly overhead hourly Patent suggests aircraft could ring police or subscriber if something is wrong Project has sparked fears they could be used to collect data Big Brother-style. 

By Dianne Apen-sadler For Mailonline

Published: 10:59 BST, 20 June 2019 | Updated: 11:25 BST, 20 June 2019

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Amazon is considering launching drones that patrol neighbourhoods and could even call the police if they spot something amiss, according to a patent.

The company may set up a subscription service for worried homeowners that means its delivery aircrafts fly overhead looking for broken windows, graffiti or a fire. 

Its drones will be able to take photos or record videos - sparking fears they could be used to collect data Big Brother-style. 

In an apparent attempt to quell such fears, the patent states drone footage will obscure adjacent properties.

It will also require proof of ownership of the object or property being monitored, as well as permission from others living nearby, for example in an apartment block.   

Amazon is considering launching drones, pictured, that patrol neighbourhoods and could even call the police if they spot something amiss, according to a patent

Amazon is considering launching drones, pictured, that patrol neighbourhoods and could even call the police if they spot something amiss, according to a patent

Amazon is thinking of offering different tiers and pricing that would see drones visit weekly, daily, or even hourly, the patent suggests.

Subscribers could either allow the drone to keep an eye out for general problems, or identify specific objects - such as an expensive car - to monitor.

After taking surveillance snaps, the images are analysed - either internally, by a computer at a hub, or by a human.

Then, an

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