The evolution of drone technology in the past nine years since the first
commercial drone was introduced at CES 2010 has caused many individuals and
businesses to adopt drones for various purposes. We are currently living in an
era in which drones are being used for pizza delivery, the shipment of goods,
and filming, and they are likely to provide an alternative for transportation
in the near future. However, drones also pose a significant challenge in terms
of security and privacy within society (for both individuals and
organizations), and many drone related incidents are reported on a daily basis.
These incidents have called attention to the need to detect and disable drones
used for malicious purposes and opened up a new area of research and
development for academia and industry, with a market that is expected to reach
1.85billionby2024.WhilesomeoftheknowledgeusedtodetectUAVshasbeenadoptedfordronedetection,newmethodshavebeensuggestedbyindustryandacademiaaliketodealwiththechallengesassociatedwithdetectingtheverysmallandfastflyingobjects.Inthispaper,wedescribenewsocietalthreatstosecurityandprivacycreatedbydrones,andpresentacademicandindustrialmethodsusedtodetectanddisabledrones.Wereviewmethodstargetedatareasthatrestrictdroneflightsandanalyzetheireffectivenesswithregardtovariousfactors(e.g.,weather,birds,ambientlight,etc.).Wepresentthechallengesarisinginareasthatallowdroneflights,introducethemethodsthatexistfordealingwiththesechallenges,anddiscussthescientificgapsthatexistinthisarea.Finally,wereviewmethodsusedtodisabledrones,analyzetheireffectiveness,andpresenttheirexpectedresults.Finally,wesuggestfutureresearchdirections.