Man Accused of Selling US Military Drones On EBay 182
garymortimer writes "47-year-old Henson Chua is in a bit of trouble for trying to sell a RQ-11B 'Raven' Unmanned Aerial Vehicle on eBay. From the article: 'A federal grand jury in Tampa returned an indictment charging Henson Chua, 47, of Manilla, Philippines, with violations of the Arms Export Control Act and smuggling, following an investigation by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations. If convicted on all counts, Chua faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison.'" I'm kicking myself for missing this auction.
Got it where (Score:2, Interesting)
How did he acquire it in the first place, second How much did it sell for?
I have a better idea (Score:2, Interesting)
The US military should sell online drone control sessions on XBox live, they could easily ringfence the middle east and put a few thousand drones in the air. They could call the game "death from above", "warfare for all" or simply "foreign policy".
Seriously, war is not cheap so why not put the worlds gamers to good use and collect the revenue?
Perhaps tangential, but a worry nevertheless... (Score:5, Interesting)
... these UAVs are becoming more and more like amateur model aircraft. In this current climate (fear, terror, control), I believe the model aircraft crowd are therefore likely to be increasingly regulated. It has happened already to the high power rocketry crowd (they pushed back - with some limited success).
An anecdote: a few years ago, a group flew a model airplane across the Atlantic (link [bbc.co.uk]). I found this quite interesting and told a few friends. One reacted with horror, postulating that terrorists would be able to use such a thing to deliver all sorts of nasty. No counterargument convinced him of the absurdity of his fear.
Re:Perhaps tangential, but a worry nevertheless... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I had one of these when I was a kid! (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't understand what should be special in communications for a device like this. We have huge, light weight hard drives these days. You just have to fill a 100 gigabytes of hard drive space with random data and copy that data onto another hard drive. Xor your transmissions against the random data on one end and xor it again against the matching random data at the other end. Voila, one time pad. 100 gigabytes worth of theoretically perfect, unbreakable encryption. It's not secret in any way, everyone in cryptography knows the "secret".
Just in case, you'd want to combine it with another form of encryption. Once you ran through the 100 gigabytes, you'd want to refresh your 100 gigabytes of random data. But the drone has to return to some sort of base eventually, and you refresh it then.