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Remote-Controlled Spy Pigeons: The Future of Surveillance?

Recording Compass on Pigeon's Back

Photo: James L. Amos / Corbis Documentary / Getty Images

Remote-Controlled Spy Pigeons Are Real… Sort Of

If you thought drones were wild, wait until you hear this. A Russian company says it’s developing remote-controlled pigeons—yes, actual birds—with brain implants, GPS trackers, cameras, and tiny solar-powered backpacks.

How It Works

The project, nicknamed PJN-1 biodrone pigeons, supposedly lets operators steer the birds mid-flight using electrodes implanted in their brains. That means someone could send a pigeon on a mission stretching hundreds of miles, all while it looks like it’s just living its normal bird life.

What They’re Carrying

These pigeons aren’t just flying aimlessly. They’re equipped with:

  • GPS to track their routes
  • Cameras to record video
  • AI software that blurs faces and sensitive details
  • Solar-powered backpacks to keep everything running

CLICK HERE for the full story

Photo: Getty Images


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