Thursday, October 11, 2007

Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs.


I have been hearing a lot about this from a great deal of people. Here is the Washington Post article online that Shaun Saunders found. We know the tech is there...saying that it is not, well is just hiding your head....what bothers me is that it's being deployed.... Has the pendelum swung that far back people? Is this the 21st century version of the sixties? Lots of unpopular wars, losts of protests, lots of government agencies spying, lots more interesting in causing fear and trouble..... Remember what Buffalo Springfield said.... "there's something happening here.... what it is ain't exactly clear..."

Here is the article

Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month.

"I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up and I'm like, 'What the hell is that?' They looked kind of like dragonflies or little helicopters. But I mean, those are not insects."

Out in the crowd, Bernard Crane saw them, too.

"I'd never seen anything like it in my life," the Washington lawyer said. "They were large for dragonflies. I thought, 'Is that mechanical, or is that alive?' "

That is just one of the questions hovering over a handful of similar sightings at political events in Washington and New York. Some suspect the insectlike drones are high-tech surveillance tools, perhaps deployed by the Department of Homeland Security.

Others think they are, well, dragonflies -- an ancient order of insects that even biologists concede look about as robotic as a living creature can look.

No agency admits to having deployed insect-size spy drones. But a number of U.S. government and private entities acknowledge they are trying. Some federally funded teams are even growing live insects with computer chips in them, with the goal of mounting spyware on their bodies and controlling their flight muscles remotely.

The robobugs could follow suspects, guide missiles to targets or navigate the crannies of collapsed buildings to find survivors.

The technical challenges of creating robotic insects are daunting, and most experts doubt that fully working models exist yet.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

but who watches the Watchers?

Very Mallcity.

ron huber.55 said...

Two science fiction books have mechano-insects: Lord of Light, by Roger Zelazny published in 1967, and
and Counting Heads by David Marusek (2005).

LoL's insect is a beetle, caught and crunched doing surveillance work on Mara, the god of illusion. In Counting heads there is a large group of mechano-bugs, all flying, many armed,programmed to carry out complex tasks.

Doubtless there are others...

Anonymous said...

I read an article yesterday (I'll scan and email to you) regarding implanting chips in moth larvae so that the resulting adult moths can subsequently be steered & have more 'equipment' such as mics and cameras added to their backs...

But as you've shown, life follows fiction.

Anonymous said...

yeah, I was reading in the paper about these! Still in the "developmental" stage ....yeah right