Slashdot Mirror


U.S. Withholding Satellite Data

plover writes "Because of Congressional legislation passed quietly in 2003, the Air Force Space Command will no longer distribute space surveillance data via NASA. There was supposed a three year transitional period where the data was to be made available via a NASA web site, but earlier this month their transitional server went down hard, and NASA has decided to not rebuild it. (It was scheduled to be shut down on 31 March 2005 anyway.) The only way to obtain satellite data now is by signing up with the official Space-Track website. Part of the agreement to obtaining data from their site is that you agree to not redistribute their data. Of course, amateurs are still free to redistribute their observations, including those of classified satellites."

37 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. Quietly passed by michaelhood · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why isn't there some sort of community political watchdog site that informs us when things are "quietly passed"? Tell us about everything that's in the works, let us decide what we do and don't like.

    1. Re:Quietly passed by SFalcon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The congressmen passing these bills barely skim the 1000+ page documents. You expect a non-paid volunteer to skim through each one? Count me out.

    2. Re:Quietly passed by luvirini · · Score: 3, Insightful
      That is definitely part of the problem. There are simply too many laws with too many things in each law. Usually laws also contain provisions that have nothing to do with the man law.

      Unfortunately until enough people throw away the atitude of "well, politics are supposed to be corrupt" I do not see much change.

    3. Re:Quietly passed by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 5, Funny
      That is definitely part of the problem. There are simply too many laws with too many things in each law

      There should be three houses of Congress; The Senate, the House of Representatives and the Board of Editors. The third house would be comprised of disenfranchised magazine editors whose sole and entire purpose was to repeal legislation the other two houses dreamed up.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    4. Re:Quietly passed by xstonedogx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree.

      The simplest solution is to stop voting these folks into office. Unfortunately that requires people to actually give a crap and not just pick a party and stick to it like a religion.

      It also requires people to realize there are issues other than abortion and gun control that are both important and likely to be seriously addressed.

      These laws are "quietly passed" because everyone is focused on the media-friendly issues that are never resolved (because they are political suicide for any politician who addresses them seriously).

    5. Re:Quietly passed by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You just dreamt a 2.500 year old system. It was called "democracy" and it worked. Even down to the "lottery" for public office.

      I also see from your post that you are thinking of not voting any more. I see this more and more in my generation (I'm 31 years old) and I hate it more and more. Not voting is NOT a political statement. Find a party or if nothing out there stands for what you stand for MAKE a party, even if it only gets one vote, yours. Or if you don't want the trouble go to the polling station and vote blank. A blank vote is a vote against ALL parties and shows yor dissatisfaction with them AND with the system. The main problem is that nowadays we have left politics to the professionals, and we forget that it is our OBLIGATION rather than our right to participate in the commons.

      I have absolutely no sympathy towards people who say "I don't vote". Apathy is not a valid political point of view.

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    6. Re:Quietly passed by smchris · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, a man who has obviously worked with government!

      Part of a job I had in the '70s required reviewing both our state and the federal legislative Registers. Be afraid. Be very afraid. If people only knew everything that gets proposed but doesn't pass committee, or if it passes committee, fails the vote (but isn't widely reported).

      Doesn't help that Congress seems especially corrupt at this moment in history. It isn't so much that the system is broken. It's working just fine for the special interests the way they want it to work.

    7. Re:Quietly passed by HeghmoH · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I personally like Heinlein's idea for a bicameral legislature. One house only passes bills, and requires a 2/3rds majority. The other house only repeals bills, and requires only 1/3rds of the vote to do so. It seems to me that this would be a nice division of responsibility and would ensure that the legal system didn't get too complicated.

      --
      Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  2. Definition of fascism by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Government, by and for corporations, of the people.

    Before you flame me with narrowminded visions of brownshirts blotting out your vision, realize that this was Mussolini's definition, and it's what we've got in the USA. Then consider that the brownshirts aren't too far off, either in the future or in actual conditions today.

    Fascism is the human face on the corporate body politic. And these days, the mask is off.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Definition of fascism by Xel'Naga · · Score: 5, Informative
      ...this was Mussolini's definition

      Who has the right to make a definition? If he had thought he could have convinced anyone, Mussolini would have defined fascism as paradise. That doesn't necessarily mean it is correct.

      Allow me to quote the definition found on Wikipedia (No link, it's currently out):
      Definition
      The word fascism has come to mean any system of government resembling Mussolini's, that
      * exalts nation and sometimes race above the individual,
      * uses violence and modern techniques of propaganda and censorship to forcibly suppress political opposition,
      * engages in severe economic and social regimentation.
      * engages in corporatism,[1] (http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=219369 )
      * implements or is a totalitarian regime.

      In an article in the 1932 Enciclopedia Italiana, written by Giovanni Gentile and attributed to Benito Mussolini, fascism is described as a system in which "The State not only is authority which governs and molds individual wills with laws and values of spiritual life, but it is also power which makes its will prevail abroad.... For the Fascist, everything is within the State and... neither individuals nor groups are outside the State.... For Fascism, the State is an absolute, before which individuals or groups are only relative...."

      Mussolini, in a speech delivered on October 28, 1925, stated the following maxim that encapsulates the fascist philosophy: "Tutto nello Stato, niente al di fuori dello Stato, nulla contro lo Stato." ("Everything in the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State".) Therefore, he reasoned, all individuals' business is the state's business, and the state's existence is the sole duty of the individual.

      Historians should judge the leaders of the world - not themselves. And it appears historians consider corporatism a rather small part of fascism. It is later in that article described as more of a means than an end.

      Historians often judge people and their deeds quite different from what they would do themselves. Consider this quote: (Translated from German to Danish to english - sorry)

      "At this hour I feel, that it is my duty to my own conscience again to appeal to the common sense, both in Great Britain and elsewhere(...)
      I can see no reason for this war to continue. Herr Churchill will probably disregard this statement by saying, that it is born of fear and doubt about our final victory. In that case I have relieved my conscience about the things that are to follow."
      Adolf Hitler - 19. july 1940.

      Yet historians put the blame of the atrocities of the second world war on Hitler, rather than Churchill.
      (Yes, I know about Godwin's law)

  3. How difficult is it to build ? by zymano · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How hard is it to build a spy/telescope satellite ?

    I found this site about building a miniature

    Miniature Space satellite

    A canadian cheapy.
    Canadian Satellite

    I think it would be cool if someone could put a cheap one in space from off the shelf telescope parts . Don't you think these prices for these orbitting telescopes are a bit farfetched ?

  4. Once again.. by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Once again knowledge resources are shut down for no reason at all. It seems the world in general is getting more and more shut out from Information.. how can ANY government claim this is healthy?

    The dumber the people get the more they need help, the more help they need the more the 'powers that be' control them. The more they control them.. the closer to get to 1984.

    I'm not into Space, but right now every day I hear more things are being hidden or shut down, yet we're still happy to waste money left right and centre on a war which was ment to be over 12 months ago, when we still have more armed forces there then any where.

    Maybe we should stop thinking about how we're going to deal with the "next terrorists" and start thinking "how are we going to make life worth while so we have a reason to fight these terrorists?"

    --
    I like muppets.
  5. Nasa has tons of servers. by ABeowulfCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nasa has tons of servers...so, the "oh gee, the server went down, so lets throw our hands in the air and give up" thing doesn't compute. There are always backups of servers. I expect organized agencies to have backups. The 'Server went down so give up' thing only applies to AOL users.

  6. Re:This is bullshit...No it's not by scheme · · Score: 4, Informative
    So, I'm back to using a commercial service to get the weather information my tax dollars already paid for. ...and they call the crap on 9/11 terrorism.

    The surveillance data that was being provided was of orbital information of satellites that the Air Force was tracking including corrections and orbital decay information. This has nothing to do with weather information.

    --
    "When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, it seems like two minutes. When you sit on a hot stove for two minutes, it
  7. i'm doing my taxes today by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    and i'm a us citizen

    aren't i paying for this?

    so what is the rationale to deny me what i have paid for?

    the purpose of my government is to serve me, is it not?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:i'm doing my taxes today by MagicDude · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Be careful with your generalization arguments. The wider the net you cast with your argument, the larger the holes are going to be.

      By your argument, you would imply thatou are entitled to know where our covert spies are, or where our ships and armies are specifically deployed, since your tax dollars paid for all of that personel and equipment. Or that you are entitled to a free trip on Air Force One, since your taxes paid for it. I'm sure the secreat service would love to have the coordinates of Air Force One broadcast on the internet, because people feel they have a right to know everything all the time. The government does what they feel is in the best interest of their people. And if you feel that they are a bunch of buttmunchers who have more allegiance to the oil industry than to the american people, then vote them out. Otherwise, you have to understand that there's the possibility that there's more to governmental policy than they choose to let you know.

  8. I am sure the bug is fixed in next version by luvirini · · Score: 3, Funny
    Of course, amateurs are still free to redistribute their observations, including those of classified satellites.

    I mean this should clearly be made illegal, I mean publishing information of existance of something secret. I am sure that the next version of the bill will correct this bug.

  9. Re:Homeland Security? by CPgrower · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bush didn't want any satellite photos of him smoking a joint.

  10. keplerian elements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is information about the precise orbits of satellites. This is what you would need if you want to shoot down a satellite.

    They are not talking about weather photos.

    Does anybody read the article? Like the article says, this info is available, more accurately, from a global collaboration of amateur observers.

    1. Re:keplerian elements by cl191 · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Does anybody read the article?" No, of course not, you think people read Playboy for the articles too?

    2. Re:keplerian elements by voisine · · Score: 3, Informative

      Shooting down a satellite is pretty much impossible with current technology (as far as you know). It's much more likely the information would be used to decide when you should cover up your wmd's since a spy satellite is about to pass overhead. Don't you read Tom Clancy?

  11. Re: How did server go down? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Funny


    > They neglected to say how the origional server went down "hard". Did someone hack it?

    Wikipedia was hosting it...

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  12. Privacy? by Agret · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the "Terms of Use" it states By continuing, you consent to your keystrokes and data content being monitored.

    --
    Have you metaroderated recently?
  13. Withholding? by gordgekko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a bit puzzled. If the U.S. is "withholding" satellite data, why is it still freely available via another web site? Less editorializing, more reporting.

    --
    You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
  14. Re:Homeland Security? by PartyBoy!911 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Vaderland security! They don't want you to notice the Death Star..

  15. Re:Spies. by mbrother · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hubble is no good for looking at the Earth because it's too bright. It would flood and destroy the detectors! We always have to do bright object checks and are restricted with how close we can look at bright objects. They made one exception to look at the moon once, but I believe they had to do some tricky things to manage that.

    Some astronomers at the Space Telescope Science Institute told me about unidentified people from the government coming to see them in the early 1990s. Hubble was having problems with a wobble when moving between light and shadow, and they were making progress in reducing it. I was told these people answered no questions, only asked them. Sounded like they had their own version of Hubble, pointed Earthward. Duh. Don't know its capabilities, but I'm sure it's pretty good.

    --
    Professor of Astronomy, Author of Spider Star & Star Dragon (Tor)
  16. Re:Homeland Security? by blowdart · · Score: 3, Funny
    The sight of the Goa'uld mothership would panic the normal population.

    Oh sorry you said Air Force Space Command?

  17. Re:Homeland Security? by secretsquirel · · Score: 3, Funny

    or as he used to call them, a freedom joint.

  18. Open ended by WillieT · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So I was reading through the "terms of use" and got to this line "... By continuing, you consent to your keystrokes and data content being monitored." The way it's stated is so ambiguous that it's scarry. Anyone else agree?

  19. Re:Spies. by fremsley471 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Hubble is no good for looking at the Earth because it's too bright. It would flood and destroy the detectors!

    No. Hubble regularly looks at Earth for calibration purposes. See: http://www.stsci.edu/stsci/meetings/shst2/williams r.html

  20. Re:Homeland Security? by tarogue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If nobody cared about him snorting coke and driving drunk, why the hell would anyone care about him smoking pot?

    --
    Life sucks, but death doesn't put out at all. -- Thomas J. Kopp
  21. celestrak.com by d_p · · Score: 3, Informative

    For years, the satellite industry has relied on celestrak.com for easy and open access to TLE's. I have written several applications over the years for satellite ground operations that ftp'd or wget'd from celestrak's ftp site. There is no ftp or http access directly to the files on space-track. You have to log in to the web site, navigate through their cgi crap and copy/paste. Its going to be a major PitA to rework this stuff. I don't have as much of a problem with the restriction of access to this data as much as the poor design of the site.

    And contrary to popular belief, I think just about any US citizen can get an account on space-track if you sign up for it. There is a lot more to the story than NASA's OIG server crashing. The Air Force has been warning that this was coming for a very long time.

    d_p

  22. No Real Story Here, Just Tinfoil Brigade Ravings by reallocate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Typical nonsense from the tinfoil brigade.

    A server supporting a system scheduled to end goes down a few weeks before that and the government decides not to spend the money to repair it. What's the problem?

    The same data remains available. What's the problem?

    The government -- any government with satellites -- doesn't want you or anyone else to know the location of its secret satellites. Why enable the very people those satellites are targetting to find out where they are?

    And, what is that crack about legislation that was "passed quietly" supposed to mean? Looks like deliberate paranoia-mongering to me: those sneaky people in Congress passed a bill and didn't ven bother to jump up and down on TV about it. Guess they forgot that the /. crowd won't pay attention unless you make a lot of loud noise.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  23. typical /. FUD by argStyopa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "NASA not distributing it the way it was done before" is NOT equivalent to "U.S. Withholding Satellite Data"

    As CelesTrak says on their site, you can "...Register for a Space Track account today at http://www.space-track.org (only 4,000 users have done so to date) and use the application provided at http://celestrak.com/SpaceTrack/TLERetrieverHelp.a sp to automatically download and convert Space Track data into CelesTrak data sets to help you with the transition. This will ensure you get the very latest data in the formats you are currently accustomed to...." (emphasis added)

    How is this "withholding" data, except in the "George-Bush-is-teh-debbil-therefore-the-governmen t-MUST be-fascist" fantasies of /.?

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:typical /. FUD by Jonathan+McDowell · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's the problem: the new site not only forbids redistributing the keps (orbital parameters) to other people, which is a problem for /.-loved sites like http://www.heavens-above.com/ which tell you when things are coming overhead, but also forbids redistributing analysis based on the data. So if you have a business that's a subcontractor to a satellite operator, and your job is to analyse the orbital data and tell the satellite owner if they are drifting off station or something, then as of last week you are theoretically out of business. And even if you are using the data to provide very basic info on satellites that falls short of what you'd need to predict where the satellite is - like my newsletter at http://www.planet4589.org/ - it's not clear if you're even allowed to do that.

      Now I suspect this is just a bureaucratic screwup, and the intent wasn't to be quite that restrictive. But there was way too little communication between the folks who wrote the law, the folks at USAF and NRO who understand which security concerns are real and which are bogus, and the different set of folks at USAF who run the orbital data service and had to interpret the law with very little guidance when writing up the new rules. In the absence of communication, things tend to be written to be so cover-your-ass that it gums up the works and that's what is happening.

  24. Satellite tracking information available... by Khyron42 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The only change here is that (a) they get to know who's accessing the data, and (b) those who access the data can't restribute it. This doesn't keep them from distributing the result of calculations based on the data, however.

    Heavens-above.com has data regarding when satellites are visible from a given location on the earth's surface. I'm not sure if this gives any data on classified satellites. This site does currently still show orbital elements on the "orbit" page of each satellite's detail list - these are probably coming from non-Airforce tracking radars.

    JTrack 3D is a great little java applet (warning, the applet loads in a separate window) that shows you a real-time view of near-earth space. You can even pull up description pages for each of the satellites shown. The "Launch/Orbital information" link on the detail page is broken, and seems to be the only part of this service affected. Again this is unlikely to ever have shown classified satellites.

    Conspiracy theorists, take note. Every spacefaring nation on the planet knows where everything is in space including the orbital elements mentioned, to make sure thier expensive new pr0nosat won't crash into that random chunk of "damaged hardware that can't be de-orbited, oops" that's taking pictures of Osama's outhouse. This just keeps people from anonymously having the US Air Force do their orbit tracking for them.

    --
    Pavlov's Dog ate the bell, and now he's barking at Schroedinger's cat all the time... -Me
  25. Re:Homeland Security? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because he openly mocked Gore in 2000 for having admitted to smoking pot, when he had smoked it himself.