Majority
of my articles are related to government spying, privacy and security
issues of your online stuffs and also measures that you can adopt in
protecting yourself from being spied on. But, your all efforts will soon
be of no use - someone is about to secretly track your every footstep.
Google will soon get an eye in the space that will be enough powerful to
see your face, thanks to the new satellite, WorldView-3 satellite,
which is scheduled to launch later today (11:30 a.m. PST) from
California's Vandenberg Air Force Base atop an Atlas 5 rocket by
Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services, according to Motherboard.
DIGITAL EYE IN SPACE
WorldView-3 satellite is developed by a US-based company DigitalGlobe,
one of the world’s leading global content providers of high-resolution
earth imagery, supplying most online mapping services to the US
government and NASA.
The satellite contains :
The satellite contains :
- Exelis-built 1.1 meter aperture telescope
- Primary visible/SWIR sensor
- Ball Aerospace-developed CAVIS instrument, which stands for Clouds, Aerosol, water Vapor, Ice, and Snow.
HIGHEST RESOLUTION IMAGERY
Two months ago, the U.S. government imposed legal restrictions on
high-detail satellite imagery, although military satellites were free to
use higher resolutions. Companies like DigitalGlobe were limited to
capturing satellite imagery from 50 centimeters square of ground space
per pixel, but are now free to capture satellite imagery up to 25 cm
resolution — twice as detailed as the previous limit.
Now, today's launch of WorldView-3 satellite will offer DigitalGlobe
customers images with four times the resolution of current machines. Its
short-wave infrared sensors will also be able to capture images
regardless of cloud or smoke cover. It will be able to photograph
680,000 square kilometres every day.
WHO WILL HAVE ACCESS TO IT
In short, it means that regular DigitalGlobe customers including Google, Microsoft, NASA, and multiple US federal agencies such as National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency — played a pivotal role in the seizure of Osama Bin Laden, will eventually be able to zoom in far closer than they are currently able to, and make out much more detail.
NEXT GENERATION SATELLITE
DigitalGlobe, which already has five satellites in orbit, is currently lobbying the US government for even further relaxation of the resolution restrictions, down to 10 cm per pixel maximum.
DigitalGlobe, which already has five satellites in orbit, is currently lobbying the US government for even further relaxation of the resolution restrictions, down to 10 cm per pixel maximum.
“At 25 centimeters, the images will be detailed enough to classify the make of a car,” the report states. “If the restrictions relax further, the plate number or owner’s face could come into clear view.”
GOOGLE WANTS YOUR MORE CLOSURE LOOK
Google, which recently acquired satellite company Skybox for $500m, also has plans to collect its own high-resolution satellite images in the future, with launch of 24 of its own satellites by 2018, which will capture images of the entire planet three times per day at a distance closer than 1 meter of resolution, and 90 seconds of video at 30 frames-per-second. The company has already launched two of its own satellites via Russian rockets.
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Google, which recently acquired satellite company Skybox for $500m, also has plans to collect its own high-resolution satellite images in the future, with launch of 24 of its own satellites by 2018, which will capture images of the entire planet three times per day at a distance closer than 1 meter of resolution, and 90 seconds of video at 30 frames-per-second. The company has already launched two of its own satellites via Russian rockets.
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