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Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us

- Are satellites a threat to individual privacy? - How bad is climate change and global warming? - Why can we not find Osama bin Laden? - Does the world have enough fresh water? Watching Earth from Space gives you the answers to these and many other burning questions of the day. This is the story of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Norris, Pat
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6938-5
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1338884
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author Norris, Pat
author_facet Norris, Pat
author_sort Norris, Pat
collection CERN
description - Are satellites a threat to individual privacy? - How bad is climate change and global warming? - Why can we not find Osama bin Laden? - Does the world have enough fresh water? Watching Earth from Space gives you the answers to these and many other burning questions of the day. This is the story of how our planet is being monitored by hundreds of space-borne instruments for both military and peaceful reasons. It highlights the technical challenges of those instruments and describes the agencies that gather useful information from them. But as well as all the essential monitoring performed by satellites - such as mapping natural or man-made disasters, agricultural performances, weather, and climate change to name a few - there is a growing swell of public opinion that they are being used by governments to erode personal privacy and freedom. This book looks at the possible conflict between public good and market forces, and the future development of new systems to deal with new needs.
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spelling cern-13388842021-04-22T01:03:22Zdoi:10.1007/978-1-4419-6938-5http://cds.cern.ch/record/1338884engNorris, PatWatching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms UsOther Subjects- Are satellites a threat to individual privacy? - How bad is climate change and global warming? - Why can we not find Osama bin Laden? - Does the world have enough fresh water? Watching Earth from Space gives you the answers to these and many other burning questions of the day. This is the story of how our planet is being monitored by hundreds of space-borne instruments for both military and peaceful reasons. It highlights the technical challenges of those instruments and describes the agencies that gather useful information from them. But as well as all the essential monitoring performed by satellites - such as mapping natural or man-made disasters, agricultural performances, weather, and climate change to name a few - there is a growing swell of public opinion that they are being used by governments to erode personal privacy and freedom. This book looks at the possible conflict between public good and market forces, and the future development of new systems to deal with new needs.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:13388842010
spellingShingle Other Subjects
Norris, Pat
Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title_full Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title_fullStr Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title_full_unstemmed Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title_short Watching Earth from Space: How Surveillance Helps Us -- and Harms Us
title_sort watching earth from space: how surveillance helps us -- and harms us
topic Other Subjects
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6938-5
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1338884
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