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A Company Announces Its Intent to Create World鈥檚 Newest Privacy Nightmare

A satellite hovering over the earth
A satellite hovering over the earth
Jay Stanley,
Senior Policy Analyst,
老澳门开奖结果 Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project
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April 23, 2018

A company called has announced an ambitious effort to create a service that will provide a live satellite video feed of any spot on earth. As on Friday by Mic, the service amounts to a live, real-time version of Google Earth (though Google is not involved). It鈥檚 not clear how realistic this is, but the concept is a scary one for privacy.

In its , EarthNow says its intent is 鈥渢o deploy a large constellation of advanced imaging satellites that will deliver real-time, continuous video of almost anywhere on Earth.鈥 The company says it will achieve this by using 鈥渢he World鈥檚 first low-cost, high-performance satellites for mass production.鈥 It says that it has secured a first round of financing from several major investors.

The company is vague about two crucial questions about the service: What the resolution will be, and who will have access to the video? On the first, the company does seem to suggest at least a certain degree of resolution in the uses it cites for its service, such as 鈥渉elping 鈥榮mart cities鈥 become more efficient,鈥 鈥渙bserving conflict zones,鈥 and 鈥渃atching illegal fishing in the act.鈥 We don鈥檛 know exactly what the company鈥檚 satellites would be able to see, but clearly it鈥檚 at least street-level detail.

On the question of who would have access to the company鈥檚 video, EarthNow鈥檚 press release says that initially the company 鈥渨ill offer commercial video and intelligent vision services鈥 to 鈥渁 range of government and enterprise customers.鈥 Eventually, however, the company says that it plans to create 鈥渕ass market applications that can be accessed instantly from a smartphone or tablet.鈥 I鈥檓 not sure what鈥檚 worse: having such a powerful surveillance tool exclusively available to government agencies and big corporations or having it available to any friends, neighbors, or internet creeps who want to see what I鈥檓 doing. The latter would be worse in some ways, though at least the surveillance wouldn鈥檛 be secret, and everybody would quickly come to learn how exposed they are so they could adjust their behavior.

Either way, if this actually came to pass, it would be a privacy disaster. It鈥檚 not just that video of our homes and every other spot on earth would be susceptible to monitoring by unknown parties at any time, with no way to know whether and when such monitoring is underway. It's that the video could also be stored and subject to analytics of all kinds 鈥 what EarthNow refers to as 鈥渋ntelligent vision services.鈥 In addition to video of our front yard, for example, computers could be programmed to sound an alarm whenever someone walks out of our house or enters it. And it could automatically track where we go from where and with whom. There would no longer be any place on earth where one could feel truly alone 鈥 no beach or yard in which to sunbathe or cavort with friends; no tall grass or secluded roof deck to make love on; no mountain or wilderness trail on which to seek solitude or time with a friend. There would be no place where one could feel secure that someone was not monitoring and recording from the sky.

There is good reason to think that the American people don鈥檛 want to live under such a system. Consider:

  • In 2016, the public that the police in Baltimore had engaged a company called Persistent Surveillance Systems to implement an aircraft-based wide-area aerial surveillance system that was capable of recording a 30-square-mile area and tracking every pedestrian and vehicle in that area and where they traveled. That revelation led to an uproar in Baltimore and around the country, and the police put the trial on hold. No other American cities have implemented the system since. What EarthNow is proposing would essentially be a global version of the Baltimore experiment.
  • When Americans realized a few years ago that the technology for surveillance drones had arrived and was no longer science fiction, we saw a rapid and amazing outpouring of concern in most state legislatures around the country. Since 2013, have enacted laws or resolutions on drones, a large proportion of which impose restrictions on the use of drones for surveillance.
  • Perhaps the most direct comparison to the EarthNow proposal was a 2007 plan approved by the Department of Homeland Security to allow U.S. law enforcement agencies to use the nation鈥檚 powerful spy satellites domestically. The 老澳门开奖结果 to this program, which was run by a blandly named entity called the 鈥.鈥 Of all the significant post-9/11 privacy controversies that were raging at the time 鈥 illegal NSA spying, data mining, new airport searches, and many others 鈥 this proposal seemed to offend members of Congress especially deeply. The House Homeland Security Committee held a hearing, members reacted very strongly against the proposal, and DHS soon thereafter that it was shutting down the program.

We should expect that however the EarthNow effort may fare, it will become increasingly feasible in the coming years to create the capability that this company is contemplating. As a society, we should make a conscious choice not to go there. We should not let technological capability dictate what we actually deploy, just as we have made a conscious choice (through our wiretapping laws) to generally disallow surveillance cameras in public places from including microphones. It is true that blanket aerial surveillance could be implemented by other governments or by companies operating out of other countries, and that is a problem that we may have to confront. But we can start by deciding for ourselves a national goal to avoid such surveillance.

We actually already have at least one policy tool with which we can start to enforce such a decision: a 1992 law that regulates the filming of earth from space. When Space X launched into space and live-streamed video of Elon Musk鈥檚 Tesla being shot off into space, the company was by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which is charged with enforcing that law.

The 老澳门开奖结果 defends the right to photography under the First Amendment, but I don鈥檛 think such a right would extend to space. Going to space is, at least for the foreseeable future, the exclusive province of governments and corporations. The former has no free expression rights, and such rights are greatly reduced for the latter 鈥 especially given that space is already an extremely highly regulated arena. Photographer鈥檚 rights are something that exist when the photographer is in a place where he or she has a right to be, but space (for the foreseeable future) is not such a place. Besides that, the public interest in preventing this kind of blanket aerial photography of our lives is compelling.

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