>You just need a network of cypherpunks with radio scanners, direction
>finders and GPSs, a way to recognize different cops by their radio
>transmissions, and a way to communicate the cop location vector data
>amongst the cypherpunk participants. Recipients need only do the
>triangulation using the vectors to locate the cops.
Why bother with "different" cops? It would seem to me that
you would want to know the location of *any* cop currently
broadcasting, or had broadcasted in the last ten minutes.
It would seem to me one could set up three (or more) RDF
locations linked via a network of sufficiently low latency, and just
plot transmission points on a map. Fade the points based on time
since transmission, and you get either a fixed dot for transmitters
that aren't moving, or a slowly fading streak for those that are.
--
A quote from Petro's Archives: **********************************************
If the courts started interpreting the Second Amendment the way they interpret
the First, we'd have a right to bear nuclear arms by now.--Ann Coulter