Originally posted by intrptr
But despite their widespread use, the drone systems are known to have security flaws. Many Reapers and Predators don’t encrypt the video they
transmit to American troops on the ground. In the summer of 2009, U.S. forces discovered “days and days and hours and hours” of the drone footage
on the laptops of Iraqi insurgents. A $26 piece of software allowed the militants to capture the video.
This is a snippet of that same article. Sorry, I have not learned to quote outside source yet? Still... gotta love it.
The insurgents it seems are able to capture the downlinked video of Drone missions for 26 bucks.
David and Goliath comes to mind. And they are wondering about a virus as well?
I smell a distinct problem here. There is no doubt that American policy will favor unmanned drones in the future, they are cheap and if we lose one
you don't have to have to send a chaplain to ring the doorbell of the parent of a dead airman. The need to avoid human causalities has become an
obsession with our military because it's getting it's marching orders from the civilian government. Personally, I agree with that strategy.But there
are somethings are machines just cannot yet do. Hence the need to encode and compress communications becomes sacrosanct. We are left with a choice.
Given the primitive capacity of modern computers to execute certain functions, is there a marker that allows the handlers of such UAV's to be cut off
from CnC and operate independently? For the foreseeable future, you need a human in the loop.
And for that you need the kind of clever communications technologies the US is not likely to deploy with lonely drones. Hence we have our problem. We
have the technology to make communications very hard core, but if "one half" of that puzzle, in this case a UAV falls into enemy hands, we have to
rewrite the book. And we just spent 50 billion dollars for, what? See the problem. It comes down to money. It always seems to in the end.