Low-Cost Micro Satellites are Spawning a Global Surveillance Arms Race



By Nicholas West

The emergence of low-cost micro satellites is starting to spawn a global surveillance arms race: the familiar problem-reaction-solution paradigm upon what all other arms races are built. “Our competitors will learn to use this exploding geo-enabled capability to learn a lot of things. If we don’t use this as well as them and use our exquisite assets to be a differentiator and stay ahead, we’re going to get behind.” – Major Mike Little, U.S. Southern Command

Google has received vast criticism for its Google Earth, Google Maps and Google Streetview systems that have essentially removed the inherent right to privacy and transferred it to the whim of corporate terms and conditions. However, this pales in comparison to what has been launched by the world’s largest defense contractors as well as newer providers of commercial space imagery.

Next-generation global imaging satellites such as Lockheed Martin’s WorldView-4 was spawned from a partnership with commercial space imagery vendor, DigitalGlobe. The largest customer of DigitalGlobe is the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, also known as GEOINT.

The incredible scope and applications of GEOINT is laid out on the .mil website’s About page but their image collection from DigitalGlobe can best be described as … penetrating:

The 31-centimeter resolution images allow viewers to discern, for example, the windshield of a car and the direction the car is facing.

….offers short-wave infrared resolution that sees through dust, smog and smoke as well as things on Earth invisible to the naked eye.

DigitalGlobe executives told The Denver Post last month that its new sensors allow them to see minerals, identify tree and plant species and gather soil composition. When analyzed, this information can decipher what’s beneath the surface — insight that can then be sold to industries including mining or oil and gas exploration.

(Source)

The Denver Post also revealed that it was DigitalGlobe who successfully petitioned the U.S. government in 2014 to remove previous restrictions on the sale of higher-resolution images to non-government buyers thus opening up the aforementioned domestic and international commercial applications. While these applications that cross over between the private and government sectors could be labeled fascism, it is the specific military and surveillance capabilities that could have the widest impact.

Naturally, the military’s mission is always to move forward with more development of increasing invasiveness and control regardless of redundancy. The ability to see a stick of butter from space, after all, won’t guarantee global security – being able to track the unplanned movements of foreign militaries supposedly will.

However, if something is undisclosed, how would one know where to launch specific surveillance? Well, of course the solution is to have pervasive surveillance that blankets the planet and stores all of the images for later retrieval. The U.S. military believes that a key component of achieving this is to have micro satellites, some only “the mass of a pair toasters,” that can collect imagery and automate searches as needed. A small company appropriately called Planet Labs has become a player, according to an article by Defense One:

With a constellation of 149 microsatellites, Planet can cover a lot more territory than any single high-end satellite, so almost anywhere in the world you look, Planet can find a recent picture of it. With new imagery coming in every day, you can automate a search for changes at various locations. That means you can detect when a military begins to operate in a given area, and perhaps even deduce what kind of equipment they’re using — all at exponentially less cost than it would take to have run the same operation a decade ago.

In the era of Big Data, algorithms are assigned detection and retrieval tasks to facilitate decision making about how serious a threat may be. That analysis is done by a specialist firm called 3GIMBALS that processes the images. Venezuela apparently came under scrutiny in early 2016, providing an example of what total military surveillance looks like:

…it enabled them to verify that the number of military vessels was unusually low during a window of time in March 2016. This meant vessels were missing from a strategically important port. Scouring for additional open-source clues, 3GIMBALS verified that Venezuela was running an unscheduled and unplanned military exercise — a response, in part, to President Obama’s March 4 re-declaration of Venezuela as a national security threat. They were even able to deduce what types of boats were engaged in the exercise and whether they were new.

“We’re able to validate and detect a boat that was being manufactured in Vietnam and shipped to Venezuela. We can then confirm or deny through Planet imagery what Venezuela publicizes on YouTube about delivery and production schedule of that vessel,” said Gerby Marks, an analyst with 3GIMBALS. “Planet’s global ‘always on’ collect can help us detect and validate movement of that vessel from that location.”

“Always on” seems to be a key phrase in how the military is planning to address the global information pool which now includes the use of sensors, biometrics like facial recognition, communications and open source data from social media and the wider Internet.

“This always-on imagery, and the automation of monitoring and knowing this was a significant blip right in the norm. We were able to go and say, what’s happening there. That’s the gist of the game-changing aspect of Planet. It’s always there, we don’t need to know where we want to go look,” said Maj. Mike Little Sr., who is part of U.S. Southern Command’s Joint Intelligence Operation Center-South,  GEOINT Division. “We didn’t know to look.When we ran an algorithm that showed a big dip in the military vessels, nobody knew that was going to happen.

Col. Steve Butow, military lead for the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental, made it quite clear what the importance is from his standpoint:

Butow also expressed optimism about how new, small satellites for intelligence would enable the military to much better monitor emerging crises. He called global threat monitoring “the ultimate big data problem. We need data from everywhere, not just particular targets.”

This is essentially the same concept that is being employed now in domestic police work as the focus is beginning to shift to a pre-crime model where people are no longer targeted based on known actions or even a series of documented suspicions, but on the predictions or connections made by an algorithm that also can retroactively analyze data. It already is leading to abuses by local law enforcement, so one can only imagine what is bound to happen on a global scale amid the mandate of an open-ended War on Terror with a stated reduction in privacy protections and human rights. Apparently, the sky is the limit…

Note: emphasis added to all quoted sources

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Nicholas West writes for ActivistPost.com and for Counter Markets agorist newsletter.

This article may be freely republished in part or in full with author attribution and source link.

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