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Gold Artifact To Orbit Earth In Hope of Alien Retrieval

Lucas123 writes "The problem: What do you leave behind that billions of years from now, and without context, would give aliens an some kind of accurate depiction of mankind. The answer: A gold-plated silicon disc with just 100 photos. That's the idea behind The Last Pictures project, which is scheduled to blast off in the next few months from Kazakhstan and orbit the earth for 5 billion years. The photos, etched into the silicon using a bitmap format, were chosen over a five-year process that involved interviews with artists, philosophers, and MIT scientists, who included biologists, physicists, and astronomers. To each, was posed a single question: What photos would you choose to send into outer space? The answer became an eclectic mix of images from pre-historic cave paintings to a photo of a group of people taken by a predator drone."

27 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. make a mirror... by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 5, Funny

    That way they will be tricked into thinking that we look just like them and hopefully they wont be as hostile as some movies predict.
    Anyway, I for one, welcome our new gold prospecting overlords!

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  2. Copyright License? by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Sir! We have a lot of pictures!"

    "Leave them alone, Lieutenant. We don't have the copyright license to copy them, because the owners are long dead."

    "But Sir!"

    "I SAID, leave them alone! Haven't you heard of biogenic-nuclear copyright licenses? Without the antidote we'd all die."

    --
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    1. Re:Copyright License? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      the only way to see the pictures is if you buy the book. thanks world for not being so cool as during and after the space race.

  3. 4 Chan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    We should just send up pictures from 4 chan.

    Then the universe will leave us alone.

  4. Re:yeah but it won't last that long. by feedayeen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It'll be gone long before then. If you figure that it only costs a few tens of millions for a private individual to launch a satellite, returning requires more fuel and heat shielding, but that's not too much more. Considering that artifacts only increase in value, the cost of "recovery" only decreases, the only thing that can happen to save it from some billionaire with questionable ethics is if there's so much junk up there that nobody even cares it exists.

  5. Re:Bitmap by vrt3 · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's exactly what they did. Sadly unsurprisingly the summary got it wrong. See this picture:
    http://creativetime.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Disc_001.jpg

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  6. Voyager discs by jeti · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I prefer the Voyager discs. They provide a more positive look on mankind. These photos look more like a guilt trip.

    1. Re:Voyager discs by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In particular, the pictures show very, very little about who this mysterious species that created the disk happens to be. I like the cave paintings, but who cares what a glacier looks like? Or a tornado? Or big waves? Or the inside of a mine/tunnel? How about showing a boat where you can actually see the people? Any space-faring race that finds Earth will have trillions of photographs of interesting geology in their libraries.

      Voyager was a sincere attempt to be testimony on the human species. This is just a testimony on the grandiose artistic pretensions of one specific human.

  7. Overkill by 1 or 2 Billion Years by Scarletdown · · Score: 5, Funny

    Designed to last for 5 billion years? Won't it and the Earth be one with the sun in about 3 or 4 billion?

    Anyway, I think we should baffle the aliens with a bit of bullshit and have a set of pictures that are screenshots of the Death Star destroying Alderaan. Hilarity ensues when word gets out about this and aliens from all over the galaxy scramble to tear up our long dead world in search of any useful information about this tech that allowed the great and ancient civilization that thrived here to build a space station with enough firepower to destroy an entire planet.

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  8. Re:Rosetta Stone by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The point of the Rosetta Stone was that it contained translations of the same passage into a mixture of languages we understood and ones we didn't. It could then be used as a key to understand the languages that we couldn't yet translate. An equivalent for this would be a passage in English, and two translations of it into languages read by aliens five billion years into the future. So, no.

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  9. Re:Rosetta Stone by Robert+Zenz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Rosetta Stone only worked because they knew two languages of the three on the stone. Aliens would most likely not know *any* language we have.

  10. Lame choice of photos by Maow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I quickly browsed the images and had a couple thoughts.

    1) Why didn't they etch images unencoded? Simply make micro images in high detail (ala microfiche) so they don't have to be decoded?

    2) I really didn't think the choice of photos was representative of life on earth. No cityscapes, no human faces close up, no animals / pets (inter-species friendship for example), no image of something technological such as a state of the art mobile phone / laptop. No images of agriculture or even a bouquet of beautiful flowers.

    Hell, I could barely tell what some images were supposed to be (well, number 1 took a couple seconds - I thought it was a crystalline structure, number two I haven't figured out yet).

    I did like earth from space, but how about an image of Armstrong / Aldrin on the moon? A passenger jet taking off showing outside & in?

    So many choices, so poorly selected IMHO.

    1. Re:Lame choice of photos by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 4, Informative

      1) Why didn't they etch images unencoded? Simply make micro images in high detail (ala microfiche) so they don't have to be decoded?

      Isn't that exactly what they've done? A lot of people seem to have missed this. They're etched on the blue centre of the disc.

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  11. Re:Rosetta Stone by maxwells_deamon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Don't belittle the above comment unless you have read a very SF good story called Omnilingual, by H. Beam Piper.

    It is even available for free:

        http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19445/19445-h/19445-h.htm

  12. context interpretation by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's what I dislike about the pictures that I've seen on the project website:

    Most of them would make bugger all sense to an alien species. Heck, some of them are hard to make sense of if you are a human.

    I, too, think the Voyager pictures were a better selection. They provide information about scale and location, something that these pictures don't. Many of them require you to have an understanding of humans and/or human culture to make sense. For example, the indoor pictures have no objective indicators of scale. There is absolutely no hint to tell future alien watchers if these are images of something microscopic, macroscopic, inbetween? Whatever this picture is showing, for example, does not even tell the alien if the area shown in the image is 5 mm, 5 cm, 5m, 50m or whatever across. The skeleton in the top-right corner is largely hidden, it only makes sense as a scale measure if you are a human and your brain is trained on filling in the blanks of other humanoid shapes.

    Also, I agree that at least from the selection they show on their webpage, way too many of them show natural catastrophies and doom and gloom.

    I miss images that would make alien visitors in the not-5-billion-years distant future help make sense of the ruins of our civilization. If you include pictures of cave paintings, why not a city or two? A million years from now, there won't be anything of either left, but a few thousand years from now, ruins of our cities will still be there even if we go away tomorrow.

    And why the focus on humans? What about the other 99% of biomass on the planet?

    For a project this expensive, it looks way too much like a high school project to me. Amateurish.

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    1. Re:context interpretation by fufufang · · Score: 5, Informative
  13. Re:Futility at its purest by Nukedoom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whaaaa? Why do you say that? We are the Universe--we're the conscious part, a beautiful self-aware organism. We didn't create ourselves, but we are the product of a vastly complex series of interactions taking place over the course of billions of years.

    We're as about as meaningful as anything the Universe has brought into existence, if not more.

  14. Re:Rosetta Stone by AC-x · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mathematical/scientific language

    Spoken language is unique, but mathematical language is universal, for a start every alien capable of space flight will know what integers are. Once you've established symbols for numbers, you can match that to elements' atomic numbers, which aliens would also understand. Once you have elements you can start to show chemical structures and so on.

    Don't you remember how they did it in [Contact](http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118884/)?

  15. Re:Bitmap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Summary:

    "The photos, etched into the silicon using a bitmap format,"

    Article:

    "MIT used a machine to etch the photos into the silicon using a bitmap format to create a binary image."

    This just illustrates what really pisses me off about journalism today. I spent a good half an hour looking for the actual source of the quotations and statements from the MIT guys. Most of the articles claim to be written by whoever posted them on their magazine/blog/newspaper, but here's the original interview that most of the articles are ripping their quotes from:

    http://www.e-flux.com/journal/the-last-pictures-interview-with-trevor-paglen/
    I got this link from MIT: http://arts.mit.edu/va/artist/paglen/

    I'm still trying to figure out where the information about "MIT used a machine to blah blah" came from, however. So far I haven't actually been able to track it back to anybody.

  16. Won't last that long by jonfr · · Score: 4, Informative

    The hops this satellite is going last 5 billion years at the orbit of 30.000 km is just nonsense. The orbit is too low and unstable at best, even if this is geosync orbit. He would have needed a orbit pattern of at least 600.000 km (outside the orbit of the moon) to get this goal. Outside forces are more likely to push the satellite towards Earth in few thousands years. Rather then from it. Orbital debris is also going to be a major problem in the long term.

  17. Re:Rosetta Stone by JurgenThor · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mathematical/scientific language

    Spoken language is unique, but mathematical language is universal, for a start every alien capable of space flight will know what integers are.

    not it they're using javascript

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  18. Re:Rosetta Stone by neyla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, it's an assumption, and it's perhaps not a 100% certanity that it is correct.

    But I think we can agree that the odds of some alien race being familiar with the concept of integers, is a lot higher than the odds that they'll understand english.

  19. Re:Rosetta Stone by AC-x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To understand elements and chemical reactions you need to know how many protons an atom has, which requires knowledge of integers. Atoms are also discrete units, again integers. Even from an astronomical point of view planets and stars for distinct countable (integer) units. If we find aliens they may not understand integers, but if aliens find us they would pretty much have to have all the mathematical and scientific knowledge we do (and a lot more) to get here.

    Unless of course said aliens are a sentient cloud of energy / Boltzmann brain, but the laws of physics seem to like to combine common elements into the same organic molecules that life on earth uses, so it seems likely that relatively familiar carbon based live would also evolve on other planets.

    Plus at least simple counting has been shown in many animals, even those only distantly related to primates, so it's not like humans are even the only species on earth that can count integers.

  20. Re:Rosetta Stone by socrplayr813 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    To understand elements and chemical reactions you need to know how many protons an atom has, which requires knowledge of integers. Atoms are also discrete units, again integers. Even from an astronomical point of view planets and stars for distinct countable (integer) units. If we find aliens they may not understand integers, but if aliens find us they would pretty much have to have all the mathematical and scientific knowledge we do (and a lot more) to get here.

    That is how we see things. Regardless of whether we're right or not, an alien civilization could very well have come up with a theory that adequately explains chemical reactions that is completely different. To think otherwise is to succumb to your own bias.

    Now, I agree that a space-faring civilization would most likely understand integers, but you can't possibly know that. The universe holds too many amazing things. We have only the tiniest understanding of it, and much of what we 'know' could very well be wrong.

    Let's take a slight detour:
    Imagine a species that evolved in space, rather than on a planet's surface. To meet our current definitions of life, they would need to be able to move around and interact with their environment, which means some sort of propulsion in space. If this species managed to make it to our planet, they could be very intelligent and still not necessarily have any need for integers or subatomic particles.

    Plus at least simple counting has been shown in many animals, even those only distantly related to primates, so it's not like humans are even the only species on earth that can count integers.

    True, but they also evolved on the same planet with the same conditions. You can't assume that alien life would be anything like the life forms on this planet. Some people think they might be, but we don't KNOW.

    --
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  21. Re:Rosetta Stone by cdrudge · · Score: 4, Funny

    If they are using javascript for space flight, all we'll need to do to defeat them is fly Jeff Goldblum and Will Smith up to their ship to infect them with NoScript.

  22. Re:Rosetta Stone by SJester · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not true. Jabba the Hutt spoke Subtitle.

  23. Re:Rosetta Stone by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > No it is not. Math itself is universal, but Mathematical Notation is a human contrivance which has no meaning without a frame of reference

    That is not entirely correct.

    *Symbols* are universal -- which is why you dream in them and not a language or math.

    Math IS symbol *manipulation* using certain rules that are based on assumptions. Fortunately ALL of math is based on *assumptions*; regarding how to define integers and how to manipulate them can be easily expressed and almost universally understood; you don't *need* to express "higher" math such the arbitrary rules such as negative exponent rules. The abstract assumptions are "context" free.

    First pick a generic set of symbols that represent *sequence* and *addition*. This also demonstrates the fact that you understand primes. (Ignore the underscores, they are for spacing...)

    0 1 2_ 3 _ 4 __ 5 _ _ 6 _ __ 7 _ _ _ 8 _ _ __ 9 _ _ _ _ showing the corresponding Arabic numeral system
    _ x xx xxx xxxx xxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx showing any generic counting system

    Demonstrating the Goldbach's conjecture

    x + x _ _ _. = xx _ _ _. 1 + 1 = 2
    xx + x ._ _. = xxx ._ _. 2 + 1 = 3
    xxx + x _ _. = xxxx _ _. 3 + 1 = 4
    xxx + xx ._. = xxxxx ._. 3 + 2 = 5
    xxxxx + x _. = xxxxxx _. 5 + 1 = 6
    xxxxx + xx . = xxxxxxx _ 5 + 2 = 7
    xxxxx + xxx _= xxxxxxxx_ 5 + 3 = 8
    xxxxxxx + xx = xxxxxxxxx 7 + 2 = 9

    Of couse one could demonstrate sub, mul, div, etc. but the above is sufficient.

    Slashdot's lame-ass filtering is retarded for posting math, code, and alignment.