Satellite Images as Courtroom Evidence 102
Anonymous Coward writes "Mark Johnson, director of motion graphics for Visual Forensics, has been using data from Earth-imaging satellites for a special purpose: sticking it to the bad guys and keep the good guys out of trouble. Now Johnson's looking forward to the launch of the Ikonos imaging satellite later this week, which is capable of taking pictures that show clearly the name of a football team in the end zone." Johnson's fees for testifying on your behalf in court are apparently $25,000 and up. Not a cheap alibi!
Re:Yes and no. Such algorithms exist... (Score:2)
Cheap alibi? (Score:1)
There is a difference...
Ben
Re:Very bad example. (Score:1)
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:1)
Jeff
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:1)
Orbit (Score:1)
This satellites has a polar orbit. They are really intended to be an alternative to aerial photography for planners, foresters, and farmers. They provide regularly updated imagery but not continuous coverage.
The specific of the ikonos satellite, including orbit info, can be found here [spaceimage.com] on the Space Imagine Inc. Home page [spaceimage.com] .
This applet [nasa.gov] shows the orbit and ground track for ~100 different satellites. It's really useful for visualizing the orbits.
Funny thing about the HST... (Score:1)
Re:A few more thoughts, figures and images... (Score:1)
$25K? I think not. (Score:1)
Maybe *I* ought to set up a service that uses that subpoena'd data to do all the simulation work. Hey, I'll only charge $10K per trial. (:
I wonder how the local police will react to photos of a crime scene they didn't take...
Been there, done that. Got the imagery to prove it (Score:1)
X.
Re:Wondering... (Score:2)
Somehow this doesn't strike me as the "justice for all" device the article implies.
Re:I don't know about you.. (Score:1)
It could also be used to bust false alibis: i.e. your friend claims to have met you at this that place at that time, and the video shows that there was nobody there at all at that time.
Or it could show that a car left your driveway, went to the murder victims house, and came back to your driveway.
You don't need to identify a person for every evidence. However, the real difficulty seems to be complete coverage. The satelitte would be useless if it happened to point in the wrong direction at the time of the crime. And given the high zoom factor, the probability that it pointed to the correct location (chosen after the fact) seems to be quite low.
Ok How Much To Opt Out (Score:1)
Re:Very bad example - frivolous use of technology (Score:1)
This kind of justification triviallizes the whole technology, (cynic mode on) but I guess that's just the sort of justification we need to get the people with the money to buy into hi-res satellites (cynic mode off).
Re:Yes and no. Such algorithms exist... Do they? (Score:1)
please don't
How does een human even know the deviation from a 'ideal' image if it can't be seen. (unless you assume what you are looking at)
Damn, we sure could use this in astronomy research. We just need to recognize to protogalaxy in the fuzz
I agree that temporal filtering of 100-1000 images would do nicely, but even that is bound to diffraction limiting. (at 200km height you need an equivalent of HST's 2.4 mirror.)
Ivo
Re:What's new about the satellites? (Score:1)
Keep in mind too that the target market for the panchromatic data are the people who are used to buying 1 foot planimetric aerial photos and are used to that level of accuracy. The closer you can get to that, the more interested they'll become.
Re: Such algorithms exist... Problems remain (Score:2)
That might be a problem, if you require sub-meter pointing accuraty and stability, just by gyro-control, on a spacecraft at 200km height, traveling at say 7000km/hour, minimal exposure time some fraction of second. It might be quite undoable.
The airplane flew too high! (Score:1)
The pilots unfortunately flew too high and touched the cable with the wing. They flew so fast, they didn't realize they touched. While 20 people where crushing to dead, the pilots loughed in their video. The video they wanted to show later to their friends to demonstrte how much courage they had, and how fun it was...
See the difference?
Markus Senoner
--
Satellites move w/ the Earth (Score:1)
Yes, This Can Work... Yes, It Is BAD (Score:1)
Now, if you use the "excess" bandwidth of the whole slew of communications satellites in orbit to send the images constantly down to a sufficiently powerful server farm (hey, you could run it on Linux!
So if good guy claims he was at the Yankees game while bad guy was shooting someone on the Great Lawn in Central Park, just punch up those two locations and look for your guys (you'll have many thousands of frames to check through, but so what?). Hopefully they're looking up, or you can identify them by the tops of their heads (unless, of course, you're taking your images at the "right" angle for each meter), but other than that... you can find the meter you're looking for rather easily...
This is all bad. This is definate Big Brother stuff, and additionally, even if the imaging is of rather poor quality and your face is difficult to see (and there is certainly feature enhancement software to clear things up if the image is shot at an angle preserves enough information to do so), the Gov't have a way of convincing juries that what they say is a picture of you IS a picture of you, because "pictures don't lie"...
For all their good, powerful computers definately are presenting the possibility of a Panoptical surveliance society. Don't worry if you're a good guy, right? Well, that depends on what "good" is... What if you're a Communist or Pacifist or other "political undesirable" at an anti-government rally? What if you just feel like taking a stroll without it being recorded for posterity? Oughtn't that be your right?
Do the security benefits outweigh the privacy infringement in this case? They do not seem to, frankly...
It just doesn't matter (Score:1)
And if you wore shorts anyway, what's to stop somebody from photochopping in someone else's nekkid butt onto your picture, if they wanted a picture of your nekkid butt that badly?
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
You know what I'd like to see... (Score:1)
my $0.02
- Jimmy
Very bad example. (Score:5)
The accident obviously had nothing to do with the fact the maps the USAF had were so old they didn't even show the ski lift.
All pilots suffer from many kinds of illusion and distortion. That's why they learn to trust their instruments and not their instincts. It may well have looked as though his plane was high above the mountain side, but that's not an excuse. "Sorry officer, I didn't know I was doing 50mph in an urban zone when I killed the school kids - with this new car it felt like 25 mph!". Yeah right, good excuse.
For those in the U.S. who may never have heard this story, people in Europe were deeply upset at the high handed way the US military handled this. They basically said "oh, whoops, sorry, accidents happen". Disgraceful, and using this dubious incident to promote the technology is a massive faux pas to anyone in Europe. The pilot should have been found guilty, and the US authorities should have been diciplined for having such outdated maps.
Rather like the maps of Belgrade....
I don't know about you.. (Score:1)
dshahin
Makes you wonder what military/intelligence has... (Score:2)
Wondering... (Score:4)
Another thing that bothers me, its called orbit. If this thing is in orbit, that means its only going to be over top of certain places at certain times of the day. Which means they'll need a lot of them to actually have coverage. This also bothered me in "Enemy of the State". It appeared they used the exact same sattelite every time....
If I'm wrong about the part above, would someone please politely correct me.
---------------------------
"I'm not gonna say anything inspirational, I'm just gonna fucking swear a lot"
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:1)
Admittedly it points in the wrong direction altogether for the nudey beaches, but you can still get one or two pretty pictures out of it, and at the last count, even schedule jobs for it to do too
Not much of a problem... (Score:3)
Considering how much the average
Wait for the 1mm resolution radar imager that can see inside houses, then start worrying
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:2)
Re:Wondering... (Score:1)
Enemy of the State wasn't a documentary, dude.
However, I'd agree that most Hollywood flicks nowadays need more than the usual amount of belief suspension.
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:2)
The real problem is taking photo's of "sensitive" areas IMHO. I've heard of a company that made underwater maps of the ocean near the coasts that were so detailed, that they were found to be dangerous to national security (however, from what I heard someone in the government got a contract with them, though they couldn't seel them to anyone else)
What type of controls are going to be setup to prevent someone from buying photos of nuclear silo sites or army bases? Foreign governments have their own spy satellites by now most likely, but does anyone think the some branch of the government might get a little antsy about this? (Though I predict very soon that the tabloids will have a new "Jesus seen in snow bank" series of articles soon)
What's new about the satellites? (Score:3)
Orbimage [orbimage.com] is also a global provider of satellite-delivered Earth imagery services with a planned constellation of five digital remote sensing satellites. They will launch 2 1-meter res. sats next year.
This hasn't happened yet? (Score:2)
I just want to know how long before I can use the thing to find out if my girlfriend is cheating on me.
-davek
Very bad example - Link for more information (Score:3)
If you care, here's a link to CNN info on it all.
http://www.cnn.com/US/9903/04/marines.cablecar.
Re:Wondering... (Score:2)
They should just do like the phone co. (Score:2)
Chuck
Re:Makes you wonder what military/intelligence has (Score:2)
Ivo
terraserver (Score:1)
Re:Yes and no. Such algorithms exist... (Score:1)
http://terraserver.microsoft.com (Score:1)
But seriously, this has to be one of the coolest things I've seen microsoft come up with. Or at least host...
Dirk
Sat Image This (Score:2)
Re:Very bad example. (Score:1)
Not only, that the maps were totally outdated, not only that this was not the first incident (people in the town repeatedly had complained about too low flying US pilots). No, the author Daniel Sorid also forgot to mention that the "good guy" who killed 20 civilians had deliberately destroid the video taping of his on-board camera after the fligh.
Cynically, after the taped evidence was gone, an "optical issusion simulation" was made up for $25.000+ bugs. A clever idea if you have no honour.
The author also forgot to mention that US government refused to pay adequate compensation to the relatives of the killed - they were only foreigeners, you know... Making up a $25.000 "illusion simulation" was definitely cheaper than opening the wallet. It was definitely cheap "justice".
Would US citicens have been killed there wouldn't have been an "illusion simulation", but some serious ass-kicking regarding the responsibles. But for the foreigners the jury of "honorable" officers didn't care at all.
A few more thoughts, figures and images... (Score:2)
As someone in one of the threads replied the application as stated in the article is for post-evaluation of an incident so I won't dwell on that.
You are quite right that the satellite will only be covering a certain area at a certain time - all dependant on the orbit... As some of you may be aware, a satellite (or any object orbiting the earth) has an orbit period determined by its altitude. The higher the altitude - the longer it takes to orbit the earth. Some figures: a typical LEO (Low Earth orbit) satellite at an altitude of about 800km will have an orbit period of approximately 100 minutes. Geo-stationary satellites on the other hand has a 24 hour orbit period but has to be at a very high altitude - 35786 km to be precise!
To get back to the point. For high resolution imaging you would like to be as close as possible to earth. Obviously this will bring the complexity and cost of your optics down - and believe me, it is expensive! But you have to consider that a LEO implies a fast orbit with some advantages and disadvantages.
A LEO orbit (600-1200km) has the advantage that the satellite's footprint will cover most of the earth in approximately 12 hours. As you need daylight for good imaging, your coverage (for imaging at least) goes up to 24 hours in practice. Allowing for good weather you can see the problem for a quick turnaround time for images e.g. car pile up example stated in the article.
Even a constellation of imaging satellites may proof to be impractical, you'll need quite a few satellites ($$$) to have an image within a few hours. In a previous /. article [slashdot.org] about this 1m resolution imager (Ikonos) you'll notice that they claim to have the image ready within 30 minutes. What they don't say is that they'll have it ready in 30 minutes after the image has been captured. Impossible to take the image of a certain target within 30 minutes of requesting it!!
IMHO visual forensics (using satellite imaging) will only be practical if the 'crime scene' stay's the way it is for a prolonged time. I can't imagine rescue services waiting for hours until an imaging satellite comes over the horizon before clearing up the debris!!
If you're interested please visit my company's homepage [sstl.co.uk] for some earth observation images taken with our LEO satellites over the years. Please note we're not close to 1m resolution - currently 30m multi-spectral and a 10m b/w experimental imager.
I'll be happy to answer more questions if anyone's is interested.
Re:Wondering... (Score:1)
Basically, the time for the satellite to orbit the earth is 24 hours, which is obviously the same amount of time for the earth to rotate once. Consequently the satellite stays above the same point.
As far as I am aware this occurs when the satellite is at a specific distance from the earths surface. ie. All satellites at this distance would take one day to orbit.
Finally, the idea was initially conceived by Arthur C. Clarke.
But the satellite is still only available for a certain area... I suppose they'll just stick it over the US where all of the high profile, rich criminals are.
Kintanon
Re:Wondering... (Score:1)
Re:Very bad example. (Score:1)
Not only that, did this make the "bad guys" to be the people who died in the accident? Yeah. They got what was coming to them, trying to hurt the career of a US military pilot. Bastards.
That brings up the problem with courtroom simulation (whether based on satillite data or otherwise): they're simulations. They leave out facts. Facts that could be important to the case (like the fact that the pilot's altimeter told him he wasn't climbing). A little bit of technical gee-whiz can cover up a whole lot of truth.
What's particularly galling in this case is that the simulation was necessary because the pilot destroyed the cockpit videotape that would have shown the jury what he saw. In particular, it would have shown clearly that while the mountain was apparently receding, the HUD display would have told him he was too low.
And, at $25,000 a pop for the defense, who do you think will really benefit from the technology? Think big bucks. Think OJ. It won't benefit your average defendant.
I wonder if, ultimately, taxes paid for the defense of the pilot. That would add insult to injury.
Re:Makes you wonder what military/intelligence has (Score:1)
Re:Makes you wonder what military/intelligence has (Score:1)
glass houses (Score:1)
Yeah.. and then get one of those polarized screens for your monitor, and lock your bathroom door, and...
;-)
Of course, as we know, that wouldn't work, unless you lived in a glass house, because of annoying things like solid walls, doors, etc, etc...
Just wait til you start getting fibre optic cameras placed in, say, the ambiguous looking microphone "holes" on those computers that have them built in, so forth and so on.
Or, just do something really rambuncious (sp?) anyway, so they'll _really_ have something work looking at...
Re:Resolution? (Score:1)
Re:Cheap alibi? (Score:1)
Somebody did the math (Score:1)
Re:Wondering... (Score:1)
Basically, the time for the satellite to orbit the earth is 24 hours, which is obviously the same amount of time for the earth to rotate once. Consequently the satellite stays above the same point.
As far as I am aware this occurs when the satellite is at a specific distance from the earths surface. ie. All satellites at this distance would take one day to orbit.
Finally, the idea was initially conceived by Arthur C. Clarke.
Polite enough I hope *smiles*.
Re:Unless you have a schlong of over 1 metre... (Score:1)
(Sorry couldn't resist)
Re:I don't know about you.. (Score:1)
Does it work at night? (Score:1)
Reading the team name in the endzone (Score:1)
There was a project called 'keyhole' from memory where it was claimed that a satellite could read a number plate on the ground. Don't recall how substatiated the rumors were though. Still, that's a fair resolution considering all the atmoshpere the light has to go through.
Re:You know what I'd like to see... (Score:1)
There isn't anything from stopping the ppl who have access to these satillites from looking at whever they want right now, except for government restrictions they may have placed on them. The same restrictions would be placed on anyone useing Earth-imageing satillites and selling custom images.
Note: when I said 'website' I ment a website where you could place an order of sorts and they would send you either a high res print or image file.
It would still be damn cool to get a nice image of my City, or even my house
- Jimmy
Uh huh... (Score:2)
I like the way a similar sentence is used every time some sort of surveillance system is introduced. I bet they said this for Echelon too.
In my mind, that's Govspeech for, 'Spying on everyone so if you've got nothing to fear, you won't mind. Right?!?'
This system is used to spot crimes happening, not to solve them. As such, it's actually a backward investigation idea backed by modern technology. In the late 1800's, the length of a police investigation was to catch the criminal in the act again. Modern investigation techniques have led to an in-depth investigation with the help of, for instance, DNA analysis.
Compare DNA analysis with satellite surveillance: one is used to identify a potential suspect, the other is used to catch a criminal red-handed. One is performed on you when you are a possible suspect already, the other is used whether you commited a crime or not. There is a hell of a difference, and while the first one speaks of the marvels of modern forensics, the last one makes me cry out 'Big Brother!'
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Speaking of football fields... (Score:2)
BIG BROTHER GO AWAY!!!
Seriously...this is too much like Enemy of the State for me. Not that the government can't already spy on me as a sneak a quick nose pick in the backyard but...isn't this a private company?
I don't want some punk kid working at Visual Forensics as a $10/hour contractor getting to surf my life on his lunch hour as easily as I may surf the web...
My $0.02, not necessarily yours...
- JoeShmoe
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Resolution? (Score:1)
New Reporting (Score:2)
It is important to realize how much privacy is being invaded both online and off, most the time without the public even realizing it is happening.
There is a possible upside though. There was some discussion a while ago this could dramatically change news reporting in times of war. For example, in the Gulf War, the news agencies wouldn't be dependent on the filtered military briefings. You can have access to almost real time imagery of the action.
This will probably never happen though. There's probably some clause that lets the goverment black out certain areas for national security purposes. Even so, it could make the government more accountable since the data will exist and could be reviewed by the public after the fact.
Hmmm, correct link to 30m res images (Score:1)
Note that most of these are NIR red, green false-colour images - i.e. red regions are grass/vegetation and the light blue is the built up areas.
My favourite is the one image of Washington DC [sstl.co.uk] and surrounding area captured in July, clearly showing the White House, Jefferson Memorial and National Mall leading to the US Capitol.
These are all JPG's - if you have the bandwidth to burn you can download the bitmaps here. [sstl.co.uk]
Re:Wondering... (Score:2)
If I want to hide from a geostationary satellite, I just need to stay a few feet north of a building, even single-story. In a big city, you shouldn't be able to see the streets beneath the skyscrapers.
Re:Wondering... (Score:1)
Privacy.. Evidence.. (Score:1)
I wonder if anyone who can't afford the 24k$ figure will ever try to subpena (sp?) the data, to get around having to pay to see if they have any evidence..
DOD.. (Score:1)
Re:Resolution? (Score:1)
- Jimmy
Geostationary satellites (Score:1)
Humor - Johnnie Cochran using satellite evidence (Score:3)
Re:Makes you wonder what military/intelligence has (Score:1)
Sorry, but if you were in my position, could you resist? That line is funny for so many reasons...
(No offence intended
M
Visual evidence in retrospect? Hmm. (Score:2)
From the article:
For $25,000, you could hire Visual Forensics to help defend you from charges that you caused a multi-car pile-up [...]
Erm, so, does this mean that this satellite is going to be gathering an archive of video footage of the entire planet, for ever and ever?
Might there not be some mild privacy concerns here?