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  2. Wildlife camera traps used to spy on and harass women in ...

    www.aol.com/wildlife-camera-traps-used-spy...

    Wildlife camera traps and drones in one of India’s best-known forest reserves are being misused to spy on women, researchers say.. Forest rangers in Jim Corbett National Park in the northern ...

  3. Human bycatch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_bycatch

    Camera traps are typically a large network of cameras that are set up in the environment to capture images of wildlife. Most camera traps have some sort of sensor to trigger the shutter; usually by movement or heat . They are used widely in conservation work, by field biologists, and, to a lesser extent, by hobbyists, and hunters.

  4. Camera trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_trap

    Camera traps are a type of remote cameras used to capture images of wildlife with as little human interference as possible. [1] Camera trapping is a method for recording wild animals when researchers are not present, and has been used in ecological research for decades.

  5. Tennessee Appeals Court Rules Against Wildlife Agents Who ...

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    In December 2022, Reason reported that both state and federal wildlife agents routinely trespass onto private land and plant cameras. Two Tennessee homeowners successfully sued the state over the ...

  6. Mystery drones are not Iranian, Chinese – or Martian – says ...

    www.aol.com/news/mystery-drones-not-iranian...

    A lawmaker on the House committee overseeing the US intelligence community on Sunday batted down rumors being leveled about mysterious sightings of drones in New Jersey and possibly elsewhere ...

  7. Monkey selfie copyright dispute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_selfie_copyright...

    [10] [11] On 4 July 2011 several publications, including The Telegraph and The Guardian, picked up the story and published the pictures along with articles that quoted Slater as describing the photographs as self-portraits taken by the monkeys, such as "Monkey steals camera to snap himself" (The Telegraph), [12] and "a camera on a tripod ...