China arrests 16 in drone hacking cases, vowing ‘clean skies’ crackdown
Chinese police have arrested 16 individuals suspected of hacking drone systems as part of a nationwide "Clean Skies" campaign. Announced by the Ministry of Public Security, these arrests occurred between January and March and are linked to 10 cases where suspects allegedly used technical means to bypass drone altitude and no-fly zone restrictions.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedChinese police have arrested 16 individuals suspected of hacking drone systems as part of a nationwide "Clean Skies" campaign. Announced by the Ministry of Public Security, these arrests occurred between January and March and are linked to 10 cases where suspects allegedly used technical means to bypass drone altitude and no-fly zone restrictions. The ministry stated these activities aimed to illegally profit, disrupt airspace order, and pose security risks. The largest case, involving over 100 drones in Shanghai, saw a suspect developing and marketing software to circumvent drone regulations since 2022. This crackdown aims to combat illegal drone use across the country.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedA suspect surnamed Li developed and marketed software to bypass drone restrictions since 2022.
The biggest case involved over 100 drones in Shanghai.
Suspects used technical means to bypass drone altitude and no-fly zone restrictions.
The arrests occurred between January and March as part of a 'Clean Skies' campaign.
Chinese police arrested 16 people suspected of hacking drone systems.