• Domestic Satellite Surveillance

    From warmfuzzy@700:100/0 to All on Wed Mar 18 17:35:56 2020
    Okay, so lets start upside down. What if a spy satellite was aimed down to the very nation that put that communications/surveillance gear up there. Sure, spying on your opposion can be useful, however being able to secure things within your own domain sounds very beneficial. So the next time you are out and about, consider, maybe its not Russia pointing its eye at you but your very own government. The word is the satellites can distingush an ovject of around a half-foot. There is a limit as to how high a resolution can be due to the fact that ground levals raise and lower periodically, such as up a steep hill.

    warmfuzzy looks up into the clouds: "hmm.. we're even surveilling outselves
    ... game changer.

    :)

    Best regards,
    warmfuzzy

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Sp00knet Master Hub [PHATstar] (700:100/0)
  • From warmfuzzy@700:100/37 to All on Tue Oct 4 02:32:48 2022
    Have you ever thought to yourself, "what foreign country can see me walking down the street right now?" But you should be asking the question of, "who is surveilling me as a whole? --- Not Just the foreigners but your very own country surveilling its own people."

    It is more productive and rewarding to spy on your own people than it is to do foreign surveillance. Your satellite is in your own country's air space so it won't be shot down, and it will always be visible and programmable by your own nation's intelligence agencies. Imagine finding a person killed by a serial killer and being able to monitor that region in finding clues to help stop the killer from committing more crimes of a similar fashion. It can be used as yet another tool for putting violent offenders away from society.

    Think of a scenario like "Enemy of the State" with Will Smith... that scenario is totally possible.

    Some sp00k f00d to chew on,
    Cheers!
    -warmfuzzy

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 2022/07/15 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: thE qUAntUm wOrmhOlE, rAmsgAtE, uK. bbs.erb.pw (700:100/37)