Are You Being Watched?

The blimp flying above your head may be watching your every move.

At first glance, there was nothing special about the blimp floating high
above the cars and crowd at this year's Indy 500 on Memorial Day
weekend. Like most airships, it acted as an advertising vehicle; this
time for the Fisher House, a charity focused on helping injured veterans
and their families. But the real promo should have been for the blimp's
creator, Raytheon, the security company best known for its weapons
systems. Hidden inside the 55-foot-long white balloon was a powerful
surveillance camera adapted from the technology Raytheon provides the
U.S. military. Essentially an unmanned drone, the blimp transmitted
detailed images to the race's security officers and to Indiana police.
"The airship is great because it doesn't have that Big Brother feel, or
create feelings of invasiveness," says Lee Silvestre, vice president of
mission innovation in Raytheon's Integrated Defense division. "But it's
still a really powerful security tool."

Until recently, Raytheon's eye-in-the-sky technology was used in
Afghanistan and Iraq to guard American military bases, working as
airborne guards against any oncoming desert threat. Using infrared
sensors and a map overlay not unlike Google Earth, the technology scans
a large area, setting important landmarks (say, the perimeter of a
military base), and constantly relays video clips back to a command
center. If a gun fires or a bomb is detonated, the airships can detect
the noise and focus the camera—all from a mighty-high 500 feet.

more...
http://www.newsweek.com/id/201697
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