Friday, April 21, 2023
Kim Jong Un Says North Korea’s 1st Spy Satellite is Ready for Launch
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his country has built its first-ever military spy satellite and that he planned to launch it on an undisclosed date, state media reported Wednesday.
Previous missile and rocket tests have demonstrated that North Korea can send satellites into space, but many experts question whether it has cameras sophisticated enough to use for spying from a satellite because only low-resolution images were released after past launches. more
Monday, April 11, 2022
China Could Turn its Commercial Satellites into Espionage Platforms
China is reportedly developing an advanced artificial intelligence (AI) system that could turn low-cost commercial satellites, already orbiting the Earth, into powerful espionage platforms. Reports suggest it could have a success rate roughly seven times higher than existing technology.
The new system is being developed by Chinese military researchers, who say it is capable of tracking moving objects as small as a car with extraordinary precision... more
Friday, December 18, 2020
TSCM Tech Alert: If You Detect a Signal at 9.65 GHz You're Being Watched
A New Satellite Can Peer Inside Buildings, Day or Night
A few months ago, a company called Capella Space launched a satellite capable of taking clear radar images of anywhere in the world, with incredible resolution — even through the walls of some buildings.
And unlike most of the huge array of surveillance and observational satellites orbiting the Earth, its satellite Capella 2 can snap a clear picture during night or day, rain or shine...a capability that will only get more powerful with the deployment of six additional satellites next year. Is that creepy from a privacy point of view? Sure...
The satellite beams down a powerful 9.65 GHz radio signal toward its
target, and then collects and interprets the signal as it bounces back
up into orbit...
Possibilities abound. Train two SAR satellites on the same target and they can actually image targets in three dimensions down to minute differences in height. more