enthalpy

Thursday, December 16, 2004


What a great idea: disabling GPS in times of national crisis. What could possibly go wrong?
President Bush has ordered plans for temporarily disabling the U.S. network of global positioning satellites during a national crisis to prevent terrorists from using the navigational technology, the White House said Wednesday.

Any shutdown of the network inside the United States would come under only the most remarkable circumstances, said a Bush administration official who spoke to a small group of reporters at the White House on condition of anonymity.

The GPS system is vital to commercial aviation and marine shipping.
To say that "the GPS system [sic] is vital to commercial aviation and marine shipping" is like saying that sunlight is vital for plants, or botox is vital to Joan Rivers. Vital becomes an understatement when the entire system of modern navigation will collapse without it. And I'm not just talking about geocachers and other dorks with a laptop and a $99 Garmin (you know who you are). But does Shrub and Co. know how important it is? Apparently:
"This is not something you would do lightly," said James A. Lewis, director of technology policy for the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. "It's clearly a big deal. You have to give them credit for being so open about what they're going to do."
I know I heard after 9/11 that the hijackers used hand-held GPS units to guide the planes into the WTC towers, but disabling the GPS network over the United States just isn't a feasible solution, regardless of the threat.



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