Moon Dust Back In NASA's Hands
gabbo529 writes with this excerpt: "It's only a speck but some moon dust from the original Apollo 11 mission is back in NASA's hands. The speck of moon dust was only one-eighth of an inch (3 millimeters) wide and was attached to a transparent piece of tape. To an auction house in St. Louis it was worth between $1,000 and $1,500. However, NASA got wind of the dust and was able to get it back."
About nothing..
You can't take the sky from me.
How much is that in Bitcoins?
Please bring me more pain pills.
NASA is more interested in preserving its legacy than in actually going back to the moon or any manned mission more than 500 miles past the earth's atmosphere.
1 gram of Moonstone is worth $1000 ?! So... 1 kg is therefore worth $1M ??!!! How expensive is a space rocket and other things needed for aggresive Moon mining ?
/s
Those NASA scientists are getting high on. Talk about going to extreme measures to protect their stash.
"We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
So even if you acquire in good faith some legally distributed moon dust, it is still NASA's possession? Does this make any sense to anyone? It's almost like they're trying to prevent unauthorized research. ALL THE TOYS ARE MINE. It's like shaking a ditch digger down for some dirt that fell in to his cuffs while he was installing your sewage line.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
I'm betting it was everyone's favourite CEO of Aperture Labs...
You can't own stolen goods, at least in my state, since the owner who it was stolen from still is the legal owner.
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
Let me FTFY:
Their failures are just a reflection of the failures of the society we've created, where taxes are considered a good thing and imagination is in short supply.
When you think you can solve any problem by raising taxes and spending more there's no need for imagination. As president Eisenhower said, "we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex". He said that in 1961, when NASA was less than three years old.
NASA was the result of that malign marriage, the military willing to spend tax money and industry willing to sell stuff to the military. In that context the scientific mission of NASA has always been in the background while the priority has always been either empty propaganda or facilitating military research.
You're right....
it would not be illegal to resell the scrap of rock in question. Therefore it is not stolen
Just like if I buy a stolen Porsche at the local chop shop it becomes mine and I can sell it?
It is not a crime to resell something you bought in good faith, but that does not mean it becomes the legal property of the buyer. It still belongs to the original owner and it's up to those who bought it in good faith to try to recover from the thief whatever they paid for it.
It's good they managed to retrieve it before someone bought it and tried to ingest it.
I hear it's pure poison.
This is the dust that NASA originally said wasn't moon dust/moon rocks in the first place, right? I'm having a hard time keeping up with all the lies nowadays.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I know from a reliable, anonymous source that NASA has a secret patent on simulated moon dust (based on their best estimates of what it would be made of). They did this so no one could analyze the content independently in the future, when someone manages to REALLY land on the moon, and can compare their samples with NASA's fake ones. But you don't need to take my word for it, its so freakin' obvious that we didnt land on the moon, just look at those obviously faked photos with odd little glitches in them. biggest hoax in human history, but im sure one day one of the 100k or so people who participated in the hoax will finally speak out! (see, i know human nature, and that many people won't keep silent forever, just for a long time if they are very motivated, and dont care about money or fame, which of course most people dont).
Definitely not enough for portal conductor liquid.
They DROPPED THE CAMERA? At a fraction of earth gravity the camera just plummeted to the surface? What kind of horse/pony show are you trying to start, NASA?
Is that big enough to put a portal on?
Just saying.
It apparently wasn't sold by NASA, so it was stolen, in a way, even if it probably only involved sneaking out the duct tape to which the dust was attached.
Case closed.
And no, I didn't read the article. Are you new to slashdot?
Hey don't blame me, IANAB