it would be awesome journalism to look at how the moto & drone industries navigated regulation. What worked & what didn't? How were their sales affected by access & regulation?
Drones are now heavily regulated here in the UK, Europe and large parts of the rest of the world.
Not DJIs fault, but the proliferation of them including faster, heavier, longer range drones (sound familiar) led the aviation regulators to do something to try and keep a lid on it.
Now, here in the UK and elsewhere you can’t fly anything with a camera on it without passing an online test, applying and paying for an Operator and/or Flyer ID. Heavier stuff is even more tightly regulated.
I’m sure many ignore the regs, and law breakers don’t care what the law says anyway, but it’s created a barrier to taking up the hobby that didn’t exist before.
Further than that, model aircraft enthusiasts who had been happily flying incident free for many decades individually or in clubs were suddenly hit with the same compliance requirements, only fair right? People have left the hobby in droves as a result, the requirement for tests/registration, strict rules around where you can fly and the prospect of even more regulations (such as Flyer location via gps) have made it more trouble than it’s worth for many.
More regulation won’t be good for the emtb scene in my humble opinion, accepting registration/licence/fees in exchange for an increase in allowable power and/or speed could lead to all bicycles with a motor being hit with similar restrictions/requirements, just like drone regs have hit model flyers in the parks etc.
Uncontrolled power increases will attract the regulators at some point, the model aircraft community tried to demonstrate that they were different to drones somehow, that a model glider wasn’t the same as a drone etc, and that people would be sensible about it and only criminals needed regulating. Again sounds familiar.
We’re at the top of a potentially very slippery slope here me thinks.