Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 08, 2026
Before you trade in your DJI drone in Malaysia, take these practical steps:
If you’re selling or trading in a DJI drone in Malaysia, the transaction usually focuses on price, flight hours, and physical condition. Far fewer conversations start with “What happens to my wedding videos, property walkthroughs, and cached location data once the drone leaves my hands?” But that question is becoming just as important. Drones capture high-resolution video, stills, and telemetry — often in places where people have a reasonable expectation of privacy. When that footage stays on a device you no longer control, it can create real privacy and compliance exposure.
At Reboot Hub, every refurbished drone goes through a multi-point bench test by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians. Our standard process includes a thorough wipe of user-accessible storage, so you’re not handed a device full of the previous owner’s data. Still, as an owner, doing your own cleanup is one of the lowest-effort ways to reduce risk. This guide walks you through what to know and do before you pass your drone on — whether you’re in Malaysia or simply applying the same privacy-aware mindset.
A DJI drone isn’t a single storage device. If you only format the SD card, you could be leaving footage behind in three other places.
| Storage location | What it can hold | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| microSD card (removable) | Full-resolution videos, photos, panoramas, hyperlapses | Most obvious privacy data — wedding footage, property surveys, crop maps, construction site imagery |
| Internal storage (select models: Mavic 3 series, Air 3, Mini 4 Pro, etc.) | Video/photo cache, low-resolution proxy clips, some originals if no SD card is inserted | Often overlooked; can contain recognizable scenes and people |
| Remote controller (RC/RC Pro/RCN2) | Cached previews, screenshot captures, flight logs with GPS coordinates | May show recording locations and home point |
| DJI Fly / DJI Pilot 2 app on connected mobile device | Album cache, telemetry, offline map tiles, flight paths | Data that links flights to a specific account or location |
| DJI account (cloud sync) | Thumbnails, auto-synced flight records, optional cloud storage files | If not de-linked, the new owner could potentially access synced content tied to your account |
Before you let go of the drone, you need to address each storage area that applies to your setup.
Malaysia regulates the handling of personal data principally through the Personal Data Protection Act 2010 (PDPA), enforced by the Personal Data Protection Commissioner. The PDPA applies to “data users” processing personal data in commercial transactions. While a private seller may not always be a registered data user, the core obligation remains a helpful yardstick: take practical steps to protect personal data from unauthorized access, disclosure, or misuse.
In the context of drone footage, personal data can include anything that identifies an individual — faces, vehicle number plates, residential property details, or even unique crop patterns linked to a specific farm. If you filmed a wedding, construction site, or archaeological feature and you can associate the footage with an identifiable person or landowner, that is likely personal data under the PDPA framework.
Selling a drone with that data still on board arguably constitutes a transfer of personal data to a third party without the consent of the data subjects. Even if enforcement against individuals is rare, the reputational and legal risk is real once the drone is in someone else’s hands. Our practical recommendation: treat the drone as you would a used laptop — wipe it before it leaves your possession.
Note: Privacy laws evolve. This guide reflects generally accepted good practice and principles drawn from Malaysia’s PDPA framework. It does not replace legal advice. Confirm the current requirements with the Personal Data Protection Commissioner’s office or a qualified professional.
1. Export and back up your own data first Copy everything you want to keep from the SD card and internal storage to a computer or external drive. Don’t rely on the drone’s in-app album — pull the actual files via USB or a card reader.
2. Securely erase the microSD card — don’t just “delete” A standard quick format or deleting files from the card’s file system only removes the index; the video data stays on the card until overwritten. Use a tool like SD Memory Card Formatter (from the SD Association) with the “Overwrite format” option enabled. On a computer, a full format (not “quick format”) that writes zeros once is a solid baseline.
3. Clear internal storage On drones with built‑in storage (e.g., 8 GB on a Mavic 3 Classic), connect the drone to your computer via USB‑C while it is powered on. The internal storage will appear as an external drive. Delete all files, then perform a full format if your operating system offers it. Some owners also go into the DJI Fly app, navigate to Profile > Settings > Camera > Format Internal Storage as a secondary pass.
4. Factory reset the drone and remote controller A firmware‑level reset returns the drone to its out‑of‑box state, removing cached data and custom settings.
5. De‑link your DJI account and remove cloud‑synced data Sign out of your DJI account on all devices associated with this drone. Open the DJI Fly app on your phone, go to Profile > Settings > Account and disable auto‑sync of flight records before signing out. Then log in via the DJI.com web dashboard, review any files stored in DJI Cloud or SkyPixel, and delete the media tied to the drone you’re selling. De‑linking the drone from your account ensures the next buyer can bind it under their own credentials without accessing your history.
6. Verify the wipe Insert a fresh microSD card (or the securely erased one) into the drone, power it on, and record a short test clip. Then check: does the camera roll show any old footage? Open the flight log on the controller — is the history empty? On the computer, connect the drone and confirm internal storage shows only the test file. A five‑minute verification guards against the most common oversight.
Though this guide focuses on Malaysia, many of the underlying data‑protection principles are similar across other regimes — GDPR in the EU and UK, PIPEDA in Canada, Nigeria’s NDPR, South Africa’s POPIA, and more. The drone owner’s responsibility remains broadly consistent: do not transfer personal data to a third party without the data subject’s consent unless you’ve properly anonymised or deleted it.
If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard. Every refurbished unit we ship has its storage fully cleared, goes through a multi-point bench test, and comes with a 180‑day warranty — so you can buy or trade with confidence that the drone arrives ready for your own data, not someone else’s.
The Malaysian Personal Data Protection Act 2010 does not contain a single line that reads “you must wipe drone data before sale.” However, the Act places a general duty on data users to protect personal data from unauthorized disclosure and to dispose of personal data when it is no longer needed for its original purpose. Transferring a drone that contains identifiable footage of individuals, homes, or vehicles to a buyer is likely to be seen as unauthorized disclosure. Our practical reading: perform a secure wipe to reduce the risk of running afoul of these privacy principles.
Yes, almost certainly. Under the EU General Data Protection Regulation, images of identifiable people are personal data. Wedding footage often captures guests’ faces, vehicle registrations, and audio recordings of conversations, all of which fall within the GDPR’s scope. Since you are transferring the drone (and implicitly the data on it) to a buyer outside the original purpose of capturing the wedding, you would likely need a lawful basis for that transfer. Deleting it before the sale avoids this problem entirely.
Nigeria’s Data Protection Regulation applies similar principles to the GDPR. The Nigerian Data Protection Commission expects data controllers to prevent the unauthorized processing of personal data. Use the same secure‑wipe approach: back up, then overwrite the storage media rather than just quick‑formatting. If you used the drone for commercial wedding photography and you have a contractual obligation to protect client data, document the deletion process so you have a record of compliance.
Under Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), transferring personal information to a service provider in another country requires that you remain accountable for that data. Sending a drone to a repair facility in China with identifiable client footage still on board means you are effectively transferring personal information across borders without the individual’s express consent. The cleaner route: remove and wipe the storage media yourself before shipping the drone.
A factory reset removes user settings, cached data, and flight logs from the device’s operating system partition, but it does not always perform a deep overwrite of the storage media. For the removable SD card, it does absolutely nothing. For internal storage, the reset typically de‑references the files, which means forensic recovery tools could potentially retrieve them. For the average trade‑in buyer, a factory reset plus a separate SD card wipe is sufficient. If your threat model includes sophisticated data recovery, perform a full overwrite of the internal storage (multiple passes using software that writes random data) before resetting.
The most immediate risk is reputational: the buyer discovers footage of your clients, your family, or your property and can do whatever they want with it — post it online, send it to competitors, or use it to infer private information. Legally, you could face complaints under data protection laws if the affected individuals find out. In a jurisdiction like the EU, you could be subject to an investigation by a data protection authority. While enforcement against individuals is relatively uncommon, the trust erosion with your customers and the potential for costly information requests are very real. That’s why we recommend verifying the wipe before the drone leaves your hands.
When the drone you’re buying has already been through a controlled refurbishment process, you skip the worry. At Reboot Hub, we source from the China supply chain (Shenzhen/Hong Kong), and every drone is graded as “Pristine Pre-Owned” or “Flawless” after a multi‑point bench test. Storage is cleared, the drone is re‑flighted, and your 180‑day warranty means you fly with fewer surprises.
Data‑conscious trade‑ins start with a clean device — and your next drone purchase should too.
Skip the gamble — every Reboot Hub drone is graded, bench-tested & warrantied.
Browse verified drones