Regarding cabin cameras, there's not much of a need for them. Busses typically don't have flight attendants. In-flight disputes are typically handled well and quickly by the cabin crew on an airliner.
People Also Ask
Yes, you can enter the cockpit if the captain or the first officer allows you that too before take off or after landing. While cruising it's NOT ALLOWED.
While the flight deck used to be accessible to passengers and especially children, it has been strictly closed off since the beginning of the millennium. In the meantime, only the pilots and, in exceptional cases such as some standby flights, airline employees are allowed to fly in the cockpit.
Film can most definitely get altered/damaged by scanners. It just depends on how sensitive the film is. Lower speed film (which is what you used) can handle scans absolutely fine. Even 800 ISO Film can go through a scanner multiple times until you see the slightest bit of fogging if you're lucky.
because the film can get destroyed even going thru the checkpoint xray machine. They'll do a quick check on it and hand it back to you. Never let a camera with film go in your checked baggage especially if it's 800 high speed film which the xray machine down there will probably destroy.
Photography has also served as an important check on government power in the airline security context. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) acknowledges that photography is permitted in and around airline security checkpoints as long as you're not interfering with the screening process.
The Samsung Galaxy Note7 device is considered a forbidden hazardous material under the Federal Hazardous Material Regulations (HMR; 49 CFR Parts 171-185), which forbid airline passengers or crew from traveling with lithium cells or batteries or portable electronic devices that are likely to generate a dangerous ...
If you are flying an aircraft for pleasure, it is certainly allowed to take photos. There is no rule against it. A good pilot does not allow anything to distract them when the right thing to be doing at a particular moment is aviating, navigating, or communicating.
Yes, some airline pilots do carry guns in the cockpit but carry a gun lawfully they must belong to a special program called the Federal Flight Deck Officers (FFDOs). This program requires special training and pilots who enroll have strict limitations on when they can use the firearm.
Simply put, there must be at least two people in the cockpit at all times when the aircraft is airborne. Indeed, when flying below 10,000 ft, the sterile cockpit rule applies, which prohibits all unnecessary conversation and activities. This includes leaving the cockpit for reasons other than absolutely necessary.