The limitations are significant and are not intended to allow hobbyists to fly stuff FPV style. People who photograph from the air as a commercial enterprise are examined and those who pass and pay the license are allowed to operate devices - be they drones or not.
I am not cynical. I am describing reality. And describing reality is not detrimental - it is important.
To the original poster (and without a tongue in cheek comments) - the Israeli law prohibits FPV flights for quite a number of reasons. The most serious ones are those of operating a remotely piloted vehicle beyond visual range (unless equipped with a license), flying above preset heights, operating within a certain distance from built-up areas, airports, etc.
Most (in my opinion all) Israeli hobbyist FPV pilots are unlicensed.