>From Wired magazine:

Where in the world is Osama bin Laden? Uh ... try checking Google 
Earth. After Google recently updated its satellite images of parts of 
the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, much of the region still looked 
blotchy — the kind of low resolution that persists in coverage of, 
say, upstate New York. But several small squares (they stand out as 
off-color patches from 680 miles up) suddenly became as detailed as 
the images of Manhattan. These sectors happen to be precisely where 
the US govern­ment has been hunting for bin Laden and his deputy, 
Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Turns out, Google gets its images from many of the same satellite 
companies — DigitalGlobe, TerraMetrics, and others - that provide 
reconnaissance to US intelligence agencies. And when the CIA requests 
close-ups of the area around Peshawar in Pakistan's North-West 
Frontier Province, Google Earth reaps the benefits (although usually 
six to 18 months later). This is also why remote parts of Asia went 
hi-res after the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 and the Kashmir 
earthquake in 2005.

Google doesn't ask why resolution improves in particular locations. 
But the CIA believes bin Laden is holed up in the Hindu Kush mountain 
range-one of the most out-of-the-way places on Earth — and you can 
now see every house, school, and mosque in certain villages there. 
Keep your eyes peeled for a very tall guy with a long beard and an AK-
47. — Matthew Cole

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.03/start.html?pg=10


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