Elon Musks 42,000 StarLink Satellites Could Just Save The …

Posted: May 1, 2020 at 4:19 pm

Elon Musks other company, SpaceX, is building Starlink, a global communications constellation that could approach a staggering 42,000 satellites. And it could be all that stands between us and a fragmented world living in virtually and actually different realities.

How?

World War II can tell us the answer.

SpaceX Launches Starlink Mission from Florida

In the early 1940s a tyrannical power using fake news, hate speech, military might and hegemonic power controlled most of Europe: the Nazis. They controlled public life, news and local economies. Resistance groups dotted the European mainland, with one lifeline for non-official communication from free countries: radio.

As such, radios were contraband and confiscated. One of the activities the allies undertook to support resistance fighters was shipping in radios for communication and outside news.

Today, radios arent at risk of being confiscated.

But the internet is.

And as a cloud-delivered service, hijacking the internet happens largely out of public sight, in servers and routers that enable services like Netflix and the BBC and Facebook and Google.

Its called splinternet, and its the ongoing division of a worldwide interconnected internet into separate and isolatable fiefdoms, each of which can be controlled and managed so that governing powers can control what their populations see.

SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

The Great Firewall of China is the most well-known example, but Iran, Syria and Vietnam also control significant portions of the internet for their populations. Russia just completed technology to wall off its internal networks, servers and internet users from the wider internet. And India, in its attempt to control unrest following its anti-Muslim citizenship law, has employed a particularly heavy-handed approach: simply blocking the internet entirely.

(One unintended result: contractors in India cant reach their employers in the U.S.)

Another country, United Arab Emirates, took a different approach: outlawing all messengers except one that it built a digital backdoor into: Totok.

However it happens, it allows governments to control what people see, read and hear from outside sources and censor what their own people say.

Starlink can change all of that.

Elon Musk recently revealed details about how people will access StarLink. It will be incredibly simple, and it will enable access to the relatively free global internet from anywhere on the planet.

Starlink Terminal has motors to self-adjust optimal angle to view sky. Instructions are simply: plug in socket, point at sky. These instructions work in either order. No training required.

What that means is that anyone can access the internet from anywhere. Chinese citizens will be able to access Google and information about Tiananmen Square. Russian citizens will be able to see external analysis of Putins financial dealings if even Russia blocks outside sources. Indian protesters cant be cut off from the internet.

Of course, governments will make the Starlink Terminal illegal.

But that in itself will be a victory.

Censorship works best when it is invisible: when people dont even know that there is alternate information, other understandings of reality. (Chinese teenage exchange students at a relatives house last year, for example, had never heard of Tiananmen Square, and refused to believe stories that, they felt, painted China in a negative light.)

But when a device to connect to the outside world becomes contraband, the glass walls become opaque. People realize that walls have been erected to prevent them from seeing other opinions.

And that is at least one step to maintaining a free, open and accessible internet globally, which should help combat fake news, propaganda and information deprivation aimed at controlling populations.

Getty

And its a step towards making the splinternet harder to achieve.

1,000 satellites will be enough to enable basic service, Musk has said. SpaceX just launched a third batch of 60 satellites, and is expected to continue launching that many every two weeks through the rest of 2020.

(For context, only about9,000satellites have been launched in all of space history, about 5,000 of which are still in orbit. And only 2,000 are actually still operational. So even at a quarter or a fifth of total capacity, Starlink is a ridiculously large satellite constellation and unprecedented in human history and astronomers have legitimate concerns about light pollution.)

While Musk has applied for launch permission for up to 42,000 satellites, hes unlikely to launch them all.

But at the current pace, a global and unblockable internet service should be available in less than a year.

This doesnt mean that all will instantly be rosy.

Governments, of course, can try to jam satellite signals. Thats unlikely to work or even be possible in all places and all times, however. Theyre also likely to continue to try to engage in false flag and other misinformation projects. And people seem to be pretty good at fooling themselves these days: locking themselves in reality bubbles that block dissenting narratives.

But any gaps in the emerging splinternet are opportunities for different perspectives and, hopefully, true facts to emerge.

Updated January 10: the story stated that SpaceX launches would be every 2-3 months; the company has actually said they will be every two weeks (with a few disclaimers).

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