Produced by: Mohsin Shaikh
Credit: CCTV/Screenshot
China’s mosquito-sized spy drone can slip past radars and walls—armed with cameras, mics, and wings thinner than paper. Is privacy about to go extinct?
Engineered to mimic a mosquito, this micro-drone from China can eavesdrop inside buildings and dodge radar—turning your room into a battlefield.
Credit: CCTV
Measuring smaller than a thumb, this insect-shaped drone could carry out covert ops undetected, raising chilling alarms over future surveillance warfare.
With transparent wings and hair-thin legs, China's bionic bug isn’t just buzzing—it’s listening, watching, and collecting data in places humans can’t reach.
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Miniature drones now fit in your hand, fly like mosquitoes, and vanish from sight—China’s leap in espionage tech could redefine the meaning of ‘bugged’.
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As China unveils its insect spy, its Jiu Tan mothership is ready to deploy 100+ drones midair—shaping a new age of airborne swarm warfare.
Experts warn these insectoid drones could steal passwords, record conversations, and spy on businesses, all without being seen or heard.
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Too small to track, too smart to ignore—China’s micro-drones could quietly reshape espionage, surveillance, and sabotage tactics worldwide.
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With indoor surveillance now mosquito-sized, the age of invisible eavesdropping is here—and the consequences for global security could be massive.