Lt. Gen. Michael Hamel, who manages space and missile systems development for the Air Force, told that to military journalists earlier this week.
"...he is pressuring domestic licensing authorities to force satellite imagery providers to reduce the resolution of their images in areas where American troops are engaged, or to delay their image feed so that an adversary can't get up-to-the-minute information on U.S. and allied military moves." Do we have commercial satellite imagery operators that provide up-to-the-minute imagery? Can he force international players to do follow these rules?
The article goes on: "Most free online imaging tools block the resolution of their satellite photos in sensitive regions..." and then notes the recent StreetView incident where Google's vans were allowed to photograph a base. It's Google's policy not to ask to enter, but in this case, as I understand it, the Google folks did ask and were allowed in. Those details were not mentioned.
-
Military.com
-
discussion about this article
Comments
October 12
Siderelis? What am I missing? Sam nailed [...]
Adena Schutzberg about Pretty Picture vs. Satellite Imagery in Use
October 12
Daniel,
I guess I was unclear. My [...]
Daniel about Pretty Picture vs. Satellite Imagery in Use
October 12
Once raw samples are formally available [...]
siva about Flash in Local Gov Websites
October 10
What would be very useful is to have a [...]
Bob Thompson about Update: Siderelis Named first DOI GIO
October 10
Ho hum.
Karen Edelstein about IDC Pegs SIM Market Growth at 14.2%
October 10
Could someone explain how the $2.8 [...]
Sam the Eagle about Update: Siderelis Named first DOI GIO
October 10
In relation to Siderelis' direct [...]