Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: Pentagon buys war satellite pictures


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2001 05:10:09 -0400


Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2001 21:23:33 -0400
From: Eric Rosenthal <eric () creative-technology net>
-To: farber () cis upenn edu

 This is from the London Times web site.


        America : last updated, October 17, 2001 00:59



        Pentagon buys war satellite pictures

The US military is paying for the exclusive rights to commercial satellite imagery of Afghanistan even though its own satellites give better pictures. This could serve two purposes: to provide an extra eye on Afghanistan, and to prevent anyone else from peeking at the war zone. The images of the Ikonos satellite, among the best available to the public, will add to those collected by military satellites and airplanes, Joan Mears, a spokeswoman for the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, said. Ms Mears declined to discuss how much the government was paying for the pictures, only saying that the agency had paid for exclusive access to the area involved in Operation Enduring Freedom, the military code name for the strikes in Afghanistan. The agency's contract with Denver-based Space Imaging began on October 7 and is believed to be in the multimillion-dollar range. A Space Imaging executive said the US government had signed a large contract with his company, not only buying exclusive rights to the imagery but paying for all the time that the satellite is over the target area. This serves to prevent anyone else from using Ikonos to take pictures of the war zone. It also prevents Space Imaging from selling the pictures to anyone else, which the company does with most of its imagery. Mark Brender, executive director of government affairs and corporate communications for Space Imaging, declined to reveal the amount of the contract but said "it was a wonderful business transaction". Top-of-the-line Ikonos pictures have one-metre resolution, meaning the satellite can distinguish features on the ground one metre in size or larger. "You can count the cars in a parking lot, tell which are pickups and sedans, and tell what colour they are," Mr Brender said.


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