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Power from space? Pentagon likes the idea -- Alan Boyle  -- MSNBC News  -- October 12, 2007

A new Pentagon study lays out the roadmap for a multibillion-dollar push to the final frontier of energy: a satellite system that collects gigawatts' worth of solar power and beams it down to Earth. The military itself could become the "anchor tenant" for such a power source, due to the current high cost of fueling combat operations abroad, the study says.

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Pentagon Backs Plan to Beam Solar Power from Space -- Dan Cho  -- New Scientist  -- October 11, 2007

A futuristic scheme to collect solar energy on satellites and beam it to Earth has gained a large supporter in the US military. A report released yesterday by the National Security Space Office recommends that the US government sponsor projects to demonstrate solar-power-generating satellites and provide financial incentives for further private development of the technology.

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Report Urges U.S. to Pursue Space-Based Solar Power -- Brian Berger  -- Space.com  -- October 10, 2007

A Pentagon-chartered report urges the United States to take the lead in developing space platforms capable of capturing sunlight and beaming electrical power to Earth.

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Israel's top secret sites on Google Earth -- Matthew Kalman  -- San Francisco Chronicle  -- October 10, 2007

Israel's most top secret security installations have been jeopardized by a new version of Google Earth, Israeli military experts say.

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Israeli Space-Based Radar Set for Indian Launch -- Craig Couvalt  -- Aviation Week & Space Technology  -- September 17, 2007

Military space reconnaissance capabilities are proliferating. This week, the U.S., Israel, India, China and Brazil could advance their commercial, technological and strategic interests with new milsats set to be launched. Once aloft, the satellites will look into each other's backyards and try to steal each other's customers. And they all will be watching Iran.

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New satellite to sharpen Google Earth -- Staff  -- CNet News.com  -- September 15, 2007

DigitalGlobe, provider of imagery for Google Earth, said a new high-resolution satellite will boost the accuracy of its satellite images and flesh out its archive. Together with the company's existing Quickbird satellite, it will offer half-meter resolution and will be able to collect over 600,000 square kilometers of imagery each day, up from the current collection of that amount each week.

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Liberties Advocates Fear Abuse of Satellite Images -- Eric Schmitt  -- New York Times  -- August 17, 2007

A new plan to allow emergency response, border control and, eventually, law enforcement agencies greater access to sophisticated satellites and other sensors that monitor American territory has drawn sharp criticism from civil liberties advocates who say the government is overstepping the use of military technology for domestic surveillance.

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Domestic Use of Spy Satellites To Widen -- Joby Warrick  -- Washington Post  -- August 16, 2007

The Bush administration has approved a plan to expand domestic access to some of the most powerful tools of 21st-century spycraft, giving law enforcement officials and others the ability to view data obtained from satellite and aircraft sensors that can see through cloud cover and even penetrate buildings and underground bunkers.

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New Office to Usher Domestic Use of Spy Satellites -- Pam Fessler  -- National Public Radio  -- August 15, 2007

The Bush administration has decided to expand the government's use of information from U.S. spy satellites for homeland security and domestic law-enforcement purposes. Officials say the change is intended primarily to help them monitor the borders and coastal areas. But it is also raising some serious privacy concerns.

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Solar Power Satellites and Space Radar -- Taylor Dinerman  -- The Space Review  -- July 16, 2007

Taylor Dinerman looks at how solar power satellites could solve the power requirements of the space based radar required for missile defense systems.

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