Clear Public Satellite Imagery Tantamount to Yelling Fire 230
TechDirt pointed out a recent bit of foolishness as a followup to California Assemblyman Joel Anderson's push to force Google and other online mapping/satellite companies to blur out schools, churches, and government buildings. When pushed, apparently his justification was that leaving these buildings un-obscured is the same as shouting fire. "News.com ran an interview with Anderson, where he attempts to defend his proposed legislation as a matter of public safety. He claims that there is no good reason why anyone would need to clearly see these buildings online, and that it can only be used for bad purposes. [...] Apparently, Anderson is the final determiner of what good people do and what bad people do with online maps."
the real WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. To alert people of a real danger, in an effort to save lives.
2. To scare people into a panic by pretending there is a real danger when there is not. (for lulz).
I'm having a hard time bending my brain to somehow apply this logic to leaving buildings unblurred.
Either you're trying to alert people of a real school/church/government building - to alert them of a real and present.. building, or you're trying to trick people (into a panic??) that the buildings are really there when they're not. That's the only reason to leave them unblurred? I'm sure I'd panic if I saw buildings on google maps that weren't really there. It might cause me to stop doing drugs. Maybe that's his plan all along??
But then he goes on to show off his USA public education by making the connection for us:
He claims that there is no good reason why anyone would need to clearly see these buildings online, and that it can only be used for bad purposes
Clearly, it all makes sense now! Seeing those buildings can only be used for bad purposes- Just like yelling fire can only be used for bad purposes! EXACTLY! There is not a single good use for shouting "fire!" except terrorism.
Ultimately, the only real WTF about this article is the belief that someone who really wants to kill you won't just drive to your house/school/church and use his eyes to make sure he's bombing/shooting/flying airplanes/melting/flooding the right place.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to mention that I regularly use satellite imagery to augment maps when I am going somewhere unfamiliar and want to get a better idea of what it will look like when I get there.
I do too, although arguably street view is a lot more useful for that. You're not going to be looking at where you're going from 200 miles up when you get there, so why do you need to see it from that angle if the purpose is to get an idea of what it will look like from the ground?
Personally, I'm having a hard time getting really worked up about this one way or the other. Maybe it's because I lived without satellite images for approximately 33 of my 37 years on this Earth without much of a problem, and I don't think we'd be losing much to not have them again. This is not like GPS or the internet as a whole or something where there is real utility that would be lost if you switched it off.
On the other hand, I'm obviously against all this fear-mongering. I'm not so intentionally dense (as I do believe some people are) as to not see any way that a terrorist could use these images for their own purposes, but that doesn't mean I think it's a reason to blur anything or turn it off. It's just a tool, and like any tool it can be used for good or evil. It's not a weapon, it's not a drug, it's not something the government should have a role in regulating.
It's more like, say, a pipe wrench. Sure, I could take a pipe wrench and whack somebody over the head with it and probably kill them. I could do it repeatedly and probably kill a lot of people.
Or, I could use it to fix broken pipes.
This is the thing with tools. They have a benign purpose and that's what most people use them for. But of course they *could* be used for evil. Are we going to just regulate everything that fits that description?
If the government is going to outlaw Google's satellite images, then it seems to me they need to outlaw pipe wrenches too.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Don't let Joel Anderson find out about street view, he'll want that blurred out as well.
The 7-11 on the corner by my house was routinely robbed. I'm sure if the image of the store in Street View was blurred out, some of these robberies would not have taken place, because I'm certain that the type of folks that hold up a convenience store plan this stuff in advance with high technology.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm afraid he's already got that covered: (Directly from the bill text [ca.gov].)
The bill would also prohibit that operator from providing street view photographs or imagery of those buildings and facilities.
Once again the California State Legislature shows that stupidity has no bounds.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I'm having a hard time getting really worked up about this one way or the other. Maybe it's because I lived without satellite images for approximately 33 of my 37 years on this Earth without much of a problem, and I don't think we'd be losing much to not have them again. This is not like GPS or the internet as a whole or something where there is real utility that would be lost if you switched it off.
I suppose the point is that some political berk wants to censor information to the general public on the grounds of: You might do something with it that I - member of the ruling class - don't want you to.
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I actually like to cruise down streets in differing locations on street view, get a feel for the state of the infrastructure, check out architectural differences, get a feel for city planning ie. see new and interesting places with out all the hassle or cost of actually going there.
This particular poly (doesn't deserve a cracker) is just trying to get attention, just think about it, it is public space, you can just walk, ride or drive past it. What's next, if is is blurred in street view and google maps
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I do too, although arguably street view is a lot more useful for that. You're not going to be looking at where you're going from 200 miles up when you get there, so why do you need to see it from that angle if the purpose is to get an idea of what it will look like from the ground?
There really aren't that many places mapped with Street View.
I often use the satellite imagery so I can see how many lanes are on a particular road and which one I need to be in to make turns or whatever. Or so that I can get a visual look at a tricky intersection. Very useful when I know I will be navigating in lots of traffic. Also, as far as buildings go it's useful to see where the entrances and exits are so I know where to turn because those are not typically listed on maps. Very useful for finding
Re:the real WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
Personally, I'm having a hard time getting really worked up about this one way or the other. Maybe it's because I lived without satellite images for approximately 33 of my 37 years on this Earth without much of a problem, and I don't think we'd be losing much to not have them again. This is not like GPS or the internet as a whole or something where there is real utility that would be lost if you switched it off.
While I understand where you are coming from and agree to an extent. You can also apply that same line of thinking to all kinds of things, including GPS and the internet. My father lived for the first 60 of 65 years of his life w/o the internet and has lived his entire life w/o GPS. So if they just go away, I really don't think it'd bother him very much.
On the other hand, I'm obviously against all this fear-mongering. I'm not so intentionally dense (as I do believe some people are) as to not see any way that a terrorist could use these images for their own purposes, but that doesn't mean I think it's a reason to blur anything or turn it off. It's just a tool, and like any tool it can be used for good or evil. It's not a weapon, it's not a drug, it's not something the government should have a role in regulating.
It's more like, say, a pipe wrench. Sure, I could take a pipe wrench and whack somebody over the head with it and probably kill them. I could do it repeatedly and probably kill a lot of people.
Or, I could use it to fix broken pipes.
This is the thing with tools. They have a benign purpose and that's what most people use them for. But of course they *could* be used for evil. Are we going to just regulate everything that fits that description?
If the government is going to outlaw Google's satellite images, then it seems to me they need to outlaw pipe wrenches too.
This is where the problem lies, except you'll need to ban more than just wrenches. Books and education will need to go as well. Obviously you need a certain level of knowledge in order to build bombs and such, so to be on the safe side we better ban reading too. Of course judging by this thread: http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/03/13/1323243 [slashdot.org] We seem to be taking care of these issues ourselves already.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Informative)
I do too, although arguably street view is a lot more useful for that. You're not going to be looking at where you're going from 200 miles up when you get there, so why do you need to see it from that angle if the purpose is to get an idea of what it will look like from the ground?
I live in Upstate NY, and around here we don't get a street view of much.
The satellite imagery is actually pretty helpful. A map just basically shows you a bunch of lines representing streets, it doesn't give you a feeling for what's in the area. The satellite imagery, however, will show you whether it's a residential or commercial area. And if you see a big building with lots of long, yellow vehicles in its parking lot you can guess that it's a school. Or you might see an interesting structure or grove of trees or something that makes a decent landmark.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)
A satellite view might show you walking paths, bike trails, and alleyways that may not show up on a street level view or on a map view.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
This pertains to all things, period. I can easily explain why my neighbor shouldn't have 2000 lbs of TNT in his garage.
People often forget that we don't need to justify ourselves just because someone wants us to.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think what people forget is that we NEVER have to justify ourselves to the government either. Ever.
This country has fallen so far from the ideals that caused its creation.
People forget what an awesome concept that is. Particularly the abolish part. It's concerning to me that we have offensive fascists like this in government that believe they should have control over information. That, the mere possibility of misusing that information is grounds for removing our rights to possess it.
I am not fooled by their protestations that is in our best interests. The people that are so fervent to take away our rights always start with those platitudes. The solution to the problems we have is not to subvert the ideals that formed our country.
Those people that would wish to deny us, can only petition their representatives to create laws. We, as a people, are supposed to vote on whether or not to enact those laws. That's democracy. What happens more often than not now, is that men like this create and enact such laws without the consent of the people.
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Maybe instead he should wear glasses which blur his vision. This would be far cheaper for one thing.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
Blurring satellite imagery to protect citizens from terrorists is tantamount to kicking voters in the face.
We can play this game all day. As you say, it should be the government justifying any curtailing of civil liberties, not civilians justifying those liberties in the first place.
But seriously, maybe we should ban career politicians because they keep implementing foreign policy that angers people enough to start killing civilians to make a point. Just a thought.
Re:the real WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Not to mention that I regularly use satellite imagery to augment maps when I am going somewhere unfamiliar and want to get a better idea of what it will look like when I get there.
Why are you going to an unfamiliar area? Sounds like terrorism to me!
Shouting "FIRE!!!": reality check (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny thing is, we keep seeing (2) as an exception to free speech.
However, let's reason this out. Is raising a false alarm illegal? Is it so wrong that it justifies an exception to the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution? Maybe.
But then, shouldn't this be applied to *ALL* false alarms?
No shouting FIRE!!! in theaters. No shouting KIDDIE PORN!!! in the internet. No shouting TERRORISM!!! everywhere.
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Then what about the damage and injury for denouncing child porn and terrorism and copyright violations, etc, etc, where no such thing exists?
Re:the real WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
Ultimately, the only real WTF about this article is the belief that someone who really wants to kill you won't just drive to your house/school/church and use his eyes to make sure he's bombing/shooting/flying airplanes/melting/flooding the right place.
Obviously you do not have a clue, otherwise you would be a politician. Sheesh.
But seriously. I follow the same logic as you. But politician logic would follow your statement by "we should also put barriers around schools, churches, and government buildings, through which you may pass only after showing your RealID and subjecting yourself to DNA testing, Breathalizer, cavity search, and/or drug testing, and said barrier must be outside visual range."
Even without eyes, any terrorist organization worth its pillar of salt would already have access to intelligence on such buildings. The Internet just makes it more convenient. There really is no stopping a dedicated terrorist, Evil Villain(tm), or common stalker.
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Think about it like this... (Score:4, Insightful)
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just another reason why we should have sanity tests and age limits on politicians.
Apparently they don't help much if our current slate of politicians are anything to go by.
Re:Think about it like this... (Score:5, Funny)
How about (Score:3, Funny)
I paid for them I want to see my investments.
Whats next, hiding their grades too? Oh, wait some schools essentially do that.
I know his reason, but just because we are embarrassed by the state of our public education doesn't mean we need to hide the buildings too :)
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Shouting fire has two common purposes:
It has a third purpose that you forgot: As an order to subordinates to initiate weaponry discharge. Typically it's preceded by the orders "Ready" and "Aim."
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that it is regularly brought up in apositive sense shows how clueless the average American is about our own history.
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This brain-bruised putz is only trying to get people to talk about him, politicians are attention whores. I remember some twenty years ago when Dianne Feinstein threw a small pistol into San Francisco Bay to "highlight" the "war on guns" of course she forgot to mention that she go's nowhere with out an armed bodyguard.
What do you bet that it was a toy gun?
Wanna get your name in the paper? talk about the following..
Terrorism
The war on drugs
Gun control
The children
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I want to know why someone doesn't rudely stand up, interrupt him, and yell, "Don't you have ANYTHING important you could be doing right now?!"
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2. To scare people into a panic by pretending there is a real danger when there is not. (for lulz).
I'm having a hard time bending my brain to somehow apply this logic to leaving buildings unblurred.
Maybe he is worried that google will snap a picture at a time when a small cloud is over a building, and someone in said building will think "Hey, I wonder what my building looks like on google earth!" and will see the cloud and think "Ohmigod! The building is on fire!" and, I don't know, jump out a window.
While that makes no type of sense, it's important to keep in mind we're talking about a california state politician, so it doesn't have to.
Seriously people... (Score:5, Insightful)
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The assumption that, if there is "no good reason" for something, then it can be banned, is a dangerous one.
Geohashing by building reference (Score:5, Interesting)
I go geohashing/geocaching using nearby buildings as a reference, with no GPS device. I put the lat/long into Google Maps, print the deepest zoom of the location, then triangulate my position based on building corners when I get there. I don't care that the building might be a church or a school, it's just a handy object with well defined corners.
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I go geohashing/geocaching using nearby buildings as a reference...
TERRORIST!!!
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That depends entirely on where you are. I have lived places where Google Maps was off by hundreds of feet in some places. I currently live in Atlanta, and have never seen my spot be more than 20 feet off the spot agreed on by my GPS-using counterparts (often my spot is not even the farthest off the consensus).
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Why is the middle of a football stadium impossible? Even if you mean the exact middle, as in the center of the field, if it's a grass field...
What I'd like to ask him... (Score:5, Insightful)
...is what, *exactly* he thinks bad people can do with sharp images of buildings that they can't do with blurry images.
'Cause I sure can't think of anything. That's no proof, but it seems like if this is a real problem he's trying to solve, he ought to at least have some idea what it is he's trying to prevent.
Of course, his real goal is to get his name in the news, and he's succeeding admirably at that.
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...is what, *exactly* he thinks bad people can do with sharp images of buildings that they can't do with blurry images.
He notes that with sharp, detailed images you can see vents and elevator shafts. My God, man! VENTS and ELEVATOR SHAFTS! Have none of you even SEEN "Mission: Impossible"?!
(Note: the preceding message involves sarcasm. Normally such a notice is not required, but considering the subject, apparently some people DO take these things seriously).
Re:What I'd like to ask him... (Score:5, Insightful)
Much like the "parental warning: explicit lyrics" stickers on music, the blurriness will just attract attention.
What's that? You weren't aware there was a government building in your neighborhood? Well, now that it's blurred out, you know there's something of political/social value there. Something that would probably make a good target...
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I suppose he would have a point (Score:5, Funny)
Or maybe he's just a tremendous ass.
Big arrows (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Big arrows (Score:4, Interesting)
This might have an opposite effect. Suppose they /did/ blur out all these sensitive structures. Isn't that kind of like waving a flag, pointing and saying "OMG, please blow up anywhere but here - oh no, please not RIGHT HERE."
Instead of blurring out the images, they should just 'photoshop' them out. I believe this has already been done with some military airbases in europe - a while back someone posted before shots and links to current shots in google earth and you could see that these bases had been "erased" leaving generic terrain in their places (all except for one, which now had a "road to nowhere" still visible).
Re:Big arrows (Score:4, Funny)
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No, ze building zis is already in a blurry pile of ruins. Ve must move on.
Germans? Really? We taught them a lesson in 1918, and they've hardly bothered us since then (apologies to Tom Lehrer).
targeting database made easy (Score:3, Funny)
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FIRE!!! (Score:2, Funny)
What?! (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, I guess Assemblyman Anderson is right, I can't tell the difference...
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Aye-aye!
*ca-click* *WHOOSH*
Torpedo away!
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FIRE!!!
Stay calm. The halon will put it out shortly.
GNIS - Freely available from the Feds (Score:5, Informative)
As I said last time, this info is available freely from our own US Government.
You can search and retrieve with Lat/Long a list of these "soft targets" using the US Governments own Geographic Names Information Services (GNIS) system.
http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/ [usgs.gov]
Ya, I learned the hard way... (Score:5, Funny)
Counter to his stated goal (Score:2)
Wouldn't blurring out government buildings, churches and schools simply highlight their locations on the maps?
If he's concerned about building details being shown, you have to wonder why. For example, what good does knowing where the skylights on a school do for a terrorist? Very little.
Shoot him. (Score:3, Funny)
Doing so will increase the overall IQ of the California Legislature. Whichever person is elected to replace him is bound to be more intelligent.
Re:Shoot him. (Score:4, Funny)
You clearly don't know much about the California Monkey Sanctuary. This guy's not even unusual.
So... (Score:5, Interesting)
Shhh (Score:2)
Next they will ban blueprints and maps. Then cameras and drawings.
THis is just the beginning of GIS information restriction.
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Will it end with gouging out everyone's eyes? Or will it continue until spatial relationships themselves have been outlawed?
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The USA is becoming more and more like a dictatorship.
While I agree that this is completely absurd, I think it's also important to moderate your indignation. This is just one asshole, not "the USA" as a whole.
Counterargument (Score:5, Insightful)
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I can understand part of it... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now I can see the need for using the obscuring technology to cover up places vital to national security like military bases and such. However, considering the level of detail available from Google earth is not enough to warrant the mass panic that Assemblyman Anderson seems to want to foster. It is not like you can see the details you can with the latest generation of spy sat. You don't get real time intel on things like deliveries and other information you would need for planning. You get no more than you would get driving down the street taking a few pictures.
Heck, cell phone cameras present a greater security risk to this country than Google Earth, but I don't see any reason to ban them either. Nearly anything can be used for nefarious purposes if desired. So banning a research tool just because someone MIGHT use it to help plan something untoward is a reactionary stance and should be avoided at all cost.
Blurring MAKES an Easy Target ID (Score:2)
What is this guy smoking?
Yeah, I know, the same stuff that allows them to vote to spend more than they can possibly get in taxes, leaving CA in an endless HOLE financially.
Now, why did we vote these guys in?
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I voted with my feet and moved to Oregon... why are you still in California?
Tax dollars (Score:3, Insightful)
Therefore, I see no reason why we shouldn't be able to view the rooftops of the buildings for which we essentially paid. If I think the church down the street from me has an architecturally-brilliant roof and I want to look at it, I see no reason why I shouldn't be able to do so.
Of course, there's also arguments to be made about security through obscurity, security theatre, etc. Tim McVeigh didn't need Google Earth when he parked a truck bomb in front of a federal building...
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Therefore, I see no reason why we shouldn't be able to view the rooftops of the buildings for which we essentially paid.
I think I've figured out what this whole thing is about. Assemblyman Anderson has been going around doing lude and lascivious things on the rooftops of public buildings which he doesn't want anyone to find out about.
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"If I think the church down the street from me has an architecturally-brilliant roof and I want to look at it, I see no reason why I shouldn't be able to do so. "
Damn you
I never thought to look what the new roof on the church down the street looks like from Google Earth. ooohh shiny. Umm, too shiny, in fact, it is half artifacts from the reflections :( lol, fresh copper roof last year was too bright for the aerial shots. oh oh, self-blurring roofs...forget i brought it up......
Anderson Hates People (Score:2)
Anderson wants to blur only public buildings. He says nothing about the millions of lives that would have been saved had all private residences been blurred out also. Since it's inevitable that bad people will use the unblurred maps for terroristical purposes, we should go ahead and charge him with genocide now to save time later.
You can't attack a map, you can only attack physical objects/locations. If Anderson had any sense he'd blur out the actual buildings rather than their cartographical representatio
Blurring (Score:3, Interesting)
*sigh*
Reasons from a Good Person (Score:2, Informative)
I work as a Geotechnical Engineering consultant. When I get a job to do, one of the first things I do to roughly assess the job site is look at google maps or live maps for satellite or aerial photos.
By blurring images of any kind of soft target or government installation just because it of what it is he is simply going to make it harder for anybody to do his or her job, honest persons and terrorists alike. If I can't find a good image of a site to get an idea of what it is like, I'll have to make an extr
Sanity (Score:2)
Apparently is optional now.
Idiots.
One freedom fighter to another (Score:2)
Here's his contact info (Score:5, Informative)
DISTRICT OFFICE
500 Fesler Street, Suite 201
El Cajon, CA 92020
(619) 441-2322, (619) 441-2327 fax
CAPITOL OFFICE
State Capitol
Sacramento, CA 95814
(916) 319-2077, (916) 319-2177 fax
email him At His Feedback Page [ca.gov]
He's dork from the exurbs of San Diego. So be firm but polite.
Re:Here's his contact info (Score:5, Funny)
Explain to him the error of his ways:
DISTRICT OFFICE
500 Fesler Street, Suite 201
El Cajon, CA 92020
...oh, and in case you're interested, here's what the top of his building [google.com] looks like.
Legitmate purposes. (Score:2)
My mother has recently been using Google Earth to look at the surrounding neighborhoods when considering houses to purchase for a planned move to my area.
I have to wonder what people will think when they see an area with all these blurred out areas.
Are they resources (schools, churches, government offices) or are they TERRORIST TARGETS? What is that blur at the end of the street? A toxic waste incinerator, or a library?
To be honest, I think this is all to promote a veil of secrecy from which our elected off
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Ditto,
I've also used it to find tennis courts when on vacation and things like that. Tennis courts are pretty easy to spot, unfortunately they're locked half the time and you can't determine that from the satellite (Maybe with Street view?)
'I'm just saying
Fire? (Score:2)
We need to ban phone books (Score:2)
Terrorists use Google Maps to look for targets? If they're looking for schools couldn't they just use, I don't know, the phone book? What does the detail level of the image have to do with anything?
The Internet was safer 20 years ago. (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps we just need to turn this Internet thingy off? Things would be safer without it. Damned progress.
Reminds me of a joke (Score:2)
Sympathy for the Devil? (Score:4, Informative)
The safety of critical energy infrastructure, using an example I happen to be familiar with, is a real issue and there is no doubt in my mind that Google Earth would make it easier for a terrorist. Want to black out a city? Detroy a dam? The first thing that I would do would be to study the project via Googe Earth. Sure, some detailed information is publicly available or on the internet, but a lot of has at least a veneer of confidentiality and particularly after 9-11 has been removed from the internet. It's not a coincidence that large power plants (which includes dams, nukes, etc.) tend to be out in the middle of nowhere. It is not inconceivable that someone doing physical reconisance of such a facility would be spotted prior to carrying out an attack. With Google Earth, you can do much of your work with publicly available and non-traceable data sets.
Do I support this legislation? No. I think on balance, the public's legitimate interests outweigh the fear-mongering. But do I think he has a valid point? Hmm... I think he might. I would challenge the geeks on
On a personal note, I hate it when an idiot is somehow proclaimed as a spokesperson for an entire cause. Both conservatives and liberals do it -- and it really should stop. This particular guys is at best non-articulate in the defense of his legislation, and at worst a blithering idiot. It's tempting to discount the ideas he advances because of his idiocy -- but I think we would do a better job protecting the First Amendment and privacy if we address the substance of his ideas... and then make fun of him.
School Maps are Useful! (Score:2, Informative)
Learning from the Soviets. (Score:3, Informative)
An excerpt from Wikipedia...
"Soviet Maskirovka
An example of huge-scale maskirovka in the Soviet Union was false maps, with distorted locations of settlements, road forks, river shapes, etc. Public transportation maps of cities, while showing correct interaction of traffic routes, were distorted in general appearance.[2] What is more striking is that distance indicators on highway road signs gave false numbers. All this was supposed to confuse a potential invader."
The only problem was that it also created the exact same confusion amongst the residents of Soviet Russia. But then, that was probably an intended effect as well.
The full text of the legislation will presumably (Score:2)
He's absolutely right (Score:4, Funny)
If I take off my glasses, all the bugs in my code go away.
Fire him (Score:2)
The fact that idiots like this get into positions of power is bad enough; what's worse is that people keep the idiots in power after they outed themselves.
Bad idea for the same reason as profiling (Score:2)
Doing this is going to reduce security. Want a high-profile bomb target? Just look for anything blurred! If it's blurred, it must be worth bombing! And the bomber won't even know until they arrive at the location that it's a school! THIS PLAN IS PERFECT!
Has anybody bothered...? (Score:2, Interesting)
Why not simply blur out the whole USA (Score:2)
Seems to me that the "free" part of the "Land of the free" is getting blurrier by the minute.
I've never been happy with the "fire" thing. (Score:3, Informative)
Even if we assume that it is so dangerous that we must apply prior restraint, this argument was initially used as justification to stop legitimate free speech. It was used as an argument against distributing flyers opposing American involvement in the First World War.
FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! (Score:5, Informative)
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Given the poor image quality of most of the satellite photos of the rural South that I've seen, I'm not sure anyone would notice that they had been blurred. Buildings the size of a football field already look like a Rorschach test....