brian carroll on Mon, 16 Jul 2001 09:01:22 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: Seeing Cyberspace : public domain |
interesting, the waternet, and not infeasible in that sewage and water networks are the free-for-all fiberlanes, a network in waiting. spy-tech is interesting in this regard, as in the US the R.Hanson case detailed a tunnel dug by the US.gov under the Russian embassy in Washington DC, which apparently was used to tap into the sounds through using the waterpipes as a data-source, an antenna i imagine, and also to rebirth the watercloset as a microphone. so too, in the field of architecture, the steel i- and h-beams used for structural armatures, are also being used for data transmission. one downfall being the electromagnetic (EM) emissions which, like wireless networks like the 8011 or whatever it is standard, being non-encrypted, is a source of broadcasting for private data. also, sure enough, powerlines in the home have been used for networking, as have the super-scaled transmission lines and towers marching across country's and their sides, as EM information backbones, where data is relayed not through the copper cable, if remember correctly, but through the casing around it, which holds it together, of aluminum or something. weirder things have happened. but, if not mistaken, there is something very funny about water and EM, in that electromagentic waves, cannot travel through water, at least that is declassified, last i read. and so submarining tech is ultra-stealthy, in that satellite to submarine networks are cat-and-mouse, with buoys doing part of the water-net work and other unknown mysteries of the deep. >emerging dimensions of water? > >waternet, an outgrowth of d.r.i.p. (the dutch retrograde internet project) >which proposes to offer unlimited bandwidth for transmitting all forms of >data over global water networks-- all the end-user needs is a c.s.n. >(client-side nozzle) and s/he can hook the pc directly up to the water >faucet... http://www.dutchwater.com > > >---------- >>From: brian carroll <[email protected]> >> Today the predominant infrastructure is not water but electricity in all of >its >> phenomenal dimensions. It has become the new architectural order >>in the built > > environment. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold