Catch Oil Polluters With Open Source Tools Using the Homebrew Oil Testing Kit 52
First time accepted submitter jywarren writes Ever wish you could investigate pollution yourself? Public Lab's recently announced open source kit aims to make it possible for anyone to become a "pollution detective" by comparing samples of oil contamination. Under the hood, the kit is pretty interesting. It uses the ultraviolet fluorescence caused by a Blu-Ray laser pen in oil samples, and includes a "papercraft" spectrometer to scan and classify oil types. The group's Kickstarter campaign is also seeking 50 early-access beta testers to help test and refine the kit before release.
LIDAR (Score:1)
Looks like they're trying to replicate a LIDAR system from the '80's. interesting.
http://publiclab.org/notes/mathew/09-23-2014/graded-oils-using-uv-fluorescence
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i guess you can test your groundwater for diesel oil contamination. this could be a problem in places that use ground wells for drinking water and have 100 yo houses with underground storage tanks for diesel or heating oil. but in CA this wouldn't apply because our water comes from an aquaduct and is presumably monitored at the wellhead.
i guess if you're freaking
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Each one costs a quarter million dollars to raise, so they're great for the economy. You know, like broken windows.
Plus some of them breastfeed.
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Make sure to not live downstream/wind of any plants then.
Is this a joke? (Score:4, Insightful)
I bet these guys [spectrasensors.com] know a lot more about this than a dinky little kickstarter project. I hope the kickstarter team realizes that they've been identifying, measuring, and studying hydrocarbons for over a century so there's a pretty significant body of work already. Use it.
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I'm going to bet that "those guys" won't even send you a printed catalog for the same $100 that the kickstarter campaign is looking for. So the cost for detection is going to be orders of magnitude different. But you're going to have orders of magnitude more accurate results too.
That being said, you're right although I probably go with a 3rd grader. The kit diagram wasn't draw in crayon but it does look like the pencil was traced. It really looks like a primary school science fair project.
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Sure looks like similar tech, laser absorption/fluorescence.
Shoot a laser through a sample & see what the response is.
http://www.spectrasensors.com/... [spectrasensors.com]
Just a *slight* difference in price.
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The whole point of the kit is to show that it isn't. Apparently, you missed that.
Re: Is this a joke? (Score:4, Informative)
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There are tons of coastal oil slicks, many of them naturally occuring from decaying organic matter.
Why would it be bad to help people figure out if they're looking at petroleum or not?
Then what? What do you expect to be done with the results?
Re: Is this a joke? (Score:4, Informative)
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to assist in accurately mapping the disaster and recovery.
To me that implies that you think that the relevant agencies aren't capable of or do not accurately map spill locations.
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I don't really have anything against this, but will re-ask the question above. "What do you expect to happen with the data?" Agencies can't or won't deal with what they have today, so the benefactor and beneficiary's of this data is who?
Maybe it will begin to instill cynicism at a much younger age, as kids will see that when they submit the findings nothing happens. No clean up occurs, companies continue to receive more tax money for "clean up", and politicians continue to smile and laugh as their next r
Paid oil trolls are censoring posts like this (Score:1)
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A guy with a low UID is a paid troll for oil companies on slashdot which feature articles related to oil once in a blue moon, and you came to this conclusion because he thinks the kickstarter is crap?
How about asking yourself if he's right or now. The premise of the kickstarter is to avoid going to an independent lab. Then what? Without going to an independent lab you have evidence that could be tainted, isn't admissible in court, and likely has problems to begin with (many oils in a common region share ver
Re: Paid oil trolls are censoring posts like this (Score:1)
And why would someone collecting a an "inadmissable" sample prevent them from collecting another from the exact same area?
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It doesn't which leads me to ask why they would collect the inadmissible one in the first place.
Also your post fails Occams Razor but sure let's just keep on thinking that oil companies spend time and effort trawling through obscure sites looking for references and then look up users they can pay to post comments. Because what happens on Slashdot as far as the resources industry is concern really makes a reputable difference... / sarcasm.
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Alright buddy, I look forward to your response to this. Occam's razor is a funny thing--it bends every which way depending on how uninformed the user is. After the Deepwater Horizon spill, BP launched a $200 million whitewashing campaign, including a now-defunct youtube channel full of propaganda videos--
http://www.prwatch.org/news/20... [prwatch.org]
--but there's no way any of that would go towards pai
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At no point did I say that BP didn't pay trolls.
What I did say is that you were responding to a person who has been on slashdot, a fringe tech site (let's face it we are just a bunch of nerds), for a long time, and claiming he's a troll simply because he disagrees in the usefulness of a product.
I suppose next you'll tell me that Samsung's paid trolls also monitor a Mormon interest group forum just in case they mention an Apple product?
$200million doesn't go very far unless it's targeted and trolls are blood
Re: Paid oil trolls are censoring posts like this (Score:1)
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And then you get sued by the polluter for libel.
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What methodology are you using? Normally API [api.org] is used to "grade" oil but that's for API gravity [wikipedia.org]. You could be measuring viscosity. Or density. Or who knows what else. But that's the point.....:"Grading oil with a homebrew test kit" is not a viable project until it is better defined.
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Time to grow up. Homebrew oil testing for big bad oil when you don't even understand the chemistry is a bad idea. This kickstarter looks like it was written up by a 2nd grader.
Posting AC to avoid burning moderation points.
Do you actually think that the court system is going to go on the say so of your "second graders?" NO - the system would alert the authorities, and then they come in with the real toys.
On a related issue, although not at all contentious, there are a lot of people with personal weather stations that are tied into NOAA via the web. I'll bet some of those folks are first grade level, and they don't have NIST current certifications on their equipment. But some
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So you find an oil slick and do more than just report that there is an oil slick. How big of a window are you opening up for the entity responsible to claim the evidence was planted by you or whomever with the kit and how much of a window for liability do you think is there when your low budget kit points to one entity who is innocent but suffers huge costs because of it?
They sell amateur detective kits relatively cheap too. Go to a murder scene and start investigating before the cops show up and you could
Is the company the Washington Red Skins? (Score:2)
If you don't get it, you don't watch Southpark.
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I know that you didn't read the k/s page but it really does help:
"We’ve based much of our work on the large amount of scientific literature available on fluorescence spectroscopy for oil identification. A selection of articles have been collected and summarized on this page -- and we welcome contributions to the list. "
http://publiclab.org/wiki/oil-... [publiclab.org]
Fracking (Score:2)
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What, these kits also detect methane?
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Great for schools (Score:1)
Fill'r up, Larry! (Score:2)
Remember the Exxon Valdez? There's justice for the likes of you (yes, you! [do prisons have connectivity btw.?]) and there's justice for Exxon and the like.
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Exxon were initially fined $5B in damage - but this was reduce after appeal to only $500M. The spill was eventually attributed to a series of errors which could at best be described as gross incompetence and easily constitute criminal negligence, including operating the ship with a non-functional radar. Despite this no criminal charges were ever brought. It took ten years just go get the compensation from Exxon, as they appealed every decision made by the courts, including the unfavorable appeals.
You are qu
The car doesn't win the race, the driver does. (Score:2)
Then there will be
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