Scientists and industry have been working together to create a global
surveillance network. It naturally weights itself to provide greater
coverage for greater populations, contains more distributed computing
power than the entirety of NASA, doesn't cost a single tax dollar and
people waste it all talking about 'Lost'. Yes, you and your cellphone
friends are part of one of the most powerful network in the world and
researchers at Purdue University have found a more important use for it
than arguing about where to eat lunch.
Their design converts your local coverage area into a vast radiation
detection grid, capable of thwarting the modern-day boogieman of
nuclear terrorism once and for all. You might think adding a
directional nuclear detection rig to your handset would make it even
more expensive than an iPhone, not to mention ruining the line of your
pocket, and you'd be right. The key to the system is the universality
of mobile phones throughout the civilized world - rather than
complicated detection components, a simple, light and very cheap
"hotter/colder" solid state sensor in each handset is enough. Data
transmitted from each to a central computer (and it turns out mobile
phones can send data pretty easily) allows a huge number of simple
signals to accurately locate any radiation source.
They've already tested the system on their university campus using a
number of simple detectors, an extremely weak radiation source, and a
load of students who'd be hilariously and inaccurately outraged if they
knew about it. They are currently working on getting mobile phone
manufacturers to incorporate the system into new phones.
They aren't the only ones harnessing this vast untapped surveillance
resource. Swiss researchers at the Institute for Pervasive Computing
(which honestly couldn't sound more like it's helping the machines take
over if it was called the Schwarzzeneger Center for Skynet production)
have open-sourced a system called "Facet", using existing mobile phone
cameras and bluetooth capabilities to create a vast CCTV network that
could cover the globe. We're sure some readers are already screaming
"Big Brother" and alt-tabbing to their blog window to write about this
evil new "Nokia 1984 phone", but before you power up your anarchizing
alerts remember two things:
1) It's an extremely flattering delusion, but nobody actually cares
enough to monitor you. If nobody even comments on your blog, why would
they invest millions to secretly surveil you?
2) They already know where you are - that tinfoil-helmet mail-order
company is really a CIA front.
Expect an increasing number of these swarm-applications as companies
wake up to the amazing potential of the system, a torrent of outraged
and terrified editorials when the mainstream finally notices it's
happening, and a top-rated Facebook application that hooks into it.
Because if you thought people updating their status message once a
minute was bad, wait until they can show you what they're doing every
second.
Original
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Jack Bauer Cellphone Network to Detect Nukes, Surveil Cities
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