It predates drones. There have been third party services that use Google Earth
and other photo mapping services to look for changes to buildings and property.
They sell the data to municipalities for identifying changes to properties.
The county I lived in Indiana back in 2008-2011 used a
Drones are slow, tedious, compared to sitting at your desk and sending in
your order to the satellite company, and the next day you get your images
back for the entire county, which you can dissect at your leisure...
-
Max
Charleston SC
On Fri, Dec 18, 2020 at 8:19 AM Buggered
That’s already happening with “drones” surveilling properties for tax
violations
--FT
Sent from iPhone
> On Dec 18, 2020, at 8:04 AM, Meade Dillon via Mercedes
> wrote:
>
> That's pretty nasty. I wonder if a jammer would be illegal. Funny how
> they try to couch the capability as
That's pretty nasty. I wonder if a jammer would be illegal. Funny how
they try to couch the capability as something benign, that scientist will
use to "save the earth", but they also do talk about military use. Now
imagine your local tax auditor or county building code enforcement uses
this to
So much for privacy - but I suspect that a metal roof will reflect the
9.65GHz beam without showing what's under it, but I could be wrong.
On Thu, Dec 17, 2020 at 5:06 PM Rick Knoble via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> https://futurism.com/new-satellite-buildings-day-night
>
>
> Rick
Looks like it’s time to put up a Faraday shield over the immense manse. Maybe
one with a reflective message on it in letters 1m high
--FT
Sent from iPhone
> On Dec 17, 2020, at 6:06 PM, Rick Knoble via Mercedes
> wrote:
>
> https://futurism.com/new-satellite-buildings-day-night
>
>
>
https://futurism.com/new-satellite-buildings-day-night
Rick
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