BI
BIG BROTHER TAKES TO THE SKIES
by Randy Gometz
While publicity and hype has gone to the communications satellites (Motorola's
"Iridium" network for cellular, U.S. Satellite Broadcasting for
cable, etc.), some less publicized satellites are being launched into orbit
for more sinister reasons -- to take pictures of the terrain and citizens
of the United States.
An article in Investor's Business ("Another Satellite Business Tries
to Get on the Map," November 11, 1997) is straight out of George Orwell's
1984. We're not talking about ordinary long distance, low resolution pictures
-- but digitalized photographs "with the most precise resolution to
ever be put into orbit." These low-orbit satellites travel at a range
of 400 miles from the surface of the planet, and "can detail an object
as small as one-meter wide." That, my friend, is high resolution indeed.
Twenty years ago, the best CIA satellites could only detail an object measuring
three meters long.
While most of the companies in this picture-taking business aren't making
any money at it yet, some stock-market analysts predict a billion-dollar
business within the next few years. There are already about 50 of these
"remote-sensing" satellites in orbit, and most of them are owned
by governments. The economic benefits of such satellites are (1) helping
farmers know which crops need more water or pesticides, (2) facilitating
the sale of properties by real estate brokers, (3) aiding assessing insurance
claims by tornado victims, and (4) providing this service to various police
departments.
Who is the biggest player in this wanna-be spy network? A Colorado-based
company called Space Imaging (half-owned by Lockheed Martin and Raytheon
Corporation)! They are not only concerned with launching these satellites,
but with interpreting what these photographs mean. Brian Webster, Space
Imaging's Director of Marketing, says, "That's where we see the biggest
segment of our business -- in the information derived and disseminated from
the imagery." Space Imaging's next two launches are scheduled for March
and September of 1998.
Two other companies that yearn for trench coats are planning to launch "remote-sensing"
satellites of their own next year. Like Space Imaging's devices, they have
one-meter resolution capabilities. They're called Orbinage (a subsidiary
of Orbital Sciences Corp., located in -- note the irony! -- Dulles, Virginia!)
and Earthwatch (owned by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. of Muncie,
Indiana). Depending on the needs of the people or agencies buying them,
these photographs will cost anywhere from $5 to $150 per square mile. Taking
into account that it currently costs in the neighborhood of $250 for police
to photograph a square mile of terrain from an aircraft, it's obvious who'll
be Space Imaging's chief customer in the future.
It's not a laughing matter. The satellites are quite real, and their uses
will invade everybody's privacy. They will be used and abused by the police
agencies. Hell, they're using them already. But what they're doing with
them now is nothing compared to what they'll be doing with them in the future.
This spying type of satellite is a business in its infancy,.Ask yourself
what new technology or gadget has ever come out that the police didn't go
out and get? I defy you to name one! It's the nature of little boys (or
grown men playing little boy games) to have the latest gizmo from Mattel
to lend credence to the illusion of whatever role they're playing. If these
agencies will go out and buy a damn tank to crash through somebody's living
room, can anyone seriously believe they won't want access to a satellite?
Again, we're not talking about the fuzzy pictures that showed the missile
silos in Cuba circa 1962, but high-resolution digital photographs that can
highlight the spots on your beagle! Growing a plant or two of ghanja in
your back yard? Busted! Make no mistake about it. That will be their initial
justification for using it. They'll say they're only scanning for particular
shades of green in your vegetable gardens to crack down on drug cultivations.
And if you think the technology will end with random still shots, you're
underestimating the capabilities of what digital satellites can do and how
rapidly the technological gains are advancing.
Remember a few years ago when all you could transmit over your computer
was a still photograph, and how extremely choppy were the first attempts
at video conferencing? Now we are very close to real-time, continuous transmissions.
Technologically speaking, there's no reason why those digital satellites
can't transmit video-camera-quality movies of what's going on in your patio
as hubby grills hamburgers. Would it be more expensive? Yes, but since when
did the price ever stop the police from acquiring the latest doodad? And
like all emerging technologies, the price always goes down when a service
or technology goes into mass production. The more it's used, the less it
costs. And the day will come when any given spot in America will be instantly
accessible to police surveillance. Will anyone object? I doubt it. Does
anyone object to all the closed-circuit TV cameras in the banks, 7-11s,
malls, or shopping centers? Slowly but surely, we're becoming anesthetized
to being filmed, photographed, and watched. Did anyone besides me notice
how many reels of security camera footage were available for review in the
Oklahoma City bombing? There were hundreds! Cameras are everywhere. So why
not in the sky? If we don't mind the ones we can see, why mind the ones
400 miles above the surface? Why? Because what goes on in the privacy of
your own property, in your home and in your yard, is nobody's business but
your own. Or at least that's the way it used to be.
One has to wonder at some of the so-called "advances" we're making
and how they are being used by people in power. Cell phones? There's not
a phone conversation that can't be intercepted. Although Cycomm International,
Motorola, and several others have encryption cards that can scramble and
stop most prying hackers (read: criminals trying to steal your cell phone
or credit card number), they do absolutely nothing to stop state, local,
or federal police agencies. Why? Because in the United States, at least,
they don't allow any encryption software to be marketed without first providing
law agencies with the encryption keys. That goes for telecommunication companies
as well as computer software companies.
And speaking of computers -- and Internet in particular -- most people don't
know that the operating system of all Microsoft products has a "bug"
in it that allows your hits on any web site to be tracked to your own PC.
Once again, while this technology was devised by advertising agencies to
record the number of hits their web sites receive, it also allows Big Brother
to see what kind of political, sexual, or social interests you have that
may be useful to him. And once again, any encryption software you may use
is totally ineffectual at keeping the government from knowing what web site
you've visited, and what you did or didn't say or download there. Anonymity?
There's no such thing anymore.
And while the insurance companies are abusing the genetic testing that may
identify you as possessing some hereditary disease (or the possibility of
your possessing a gene that may or may not mutate into a hereditary disease),
this is only the beginning of where genetic sequencing will be leading us.
For example, a gene has been identified that's believed to lead to "aggressive"
behavior? If that would identify who'll be the next maniac who climbs into
a bell tower with a high-powered rifle, one could argue that that's not
such a bad thing. But what exactly is "aggressive" behavior? I
suspect we could easily interchange competitive behavior with aggressive
behavior. Do we want a homicidal or assaultive people erased from the face
of the earth -- even if it takes some genetic reengineering? Probably. But
do we want it at the expense of eliminating ambition, competitiveness, and
the entrepreneurial spirit that is the foundation of our innovation? That
seems to be a pretty steep price. And don't think that once companies like
Human Genome Sciences successfully identify and chart every gene in the
human body, they won't eventually be used -- and abused -- by people in
authority!
History is replete with examples of precisely this kind of manipulation.
In the current transitional phase, fingerprint scans on our credit cards,
retinal scans at the ATMs, eyes in the skies, ears on our telephones, tracks
on our computer screens, and the sequencing of our very genes mean not only
the end of our anonymity, but the end of our individuality. It's not enough
to know who we are, what we do, and where we go, but who we're likely to
be, where we're subject to go, and what we're capable of doing. We're on
the bridge of the 21st century all right, and it's taking us directly to
1984.
--Randy Gometz writes from prison at Florence, Colorado

Spring 1998-- N.C.Xpress
-- Archives -- Electrons
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