
	by Nicholas West
	
	February 13, 2012
	from 
	ActivistPost Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	It's bad enough that drones have been welcomed by Congress into American 
	skies, as well as already being used around the planet to conduct 
	surveillance and bomb select countries from remote locations.
	
	The latest proposed addition to the drone spy program is even creepier: 
	disposable computers with software programs funded by 
	DARPA to be dropped as 
	self-destructing "bombs."
	
	Now, not only will drones surveil and hack from above, but they will drop a 
	payload to interface with hidden computers on the ground, completely 
	integrating a full-spectrum data transmission and control grid.
	
	The name of the project, as well as its announcement at a hacker convention 
	called 
	ShmooCon, had this non-techie convinced that it had to be satire or a 
	hoax, but the project has also been noted by Forbes and Wired, which only 
	serves to illustrate how far off into our dystopian technocratic police 
	state we have wandered. It seems that we are being acclimated to how funny 
	and cool our futuristic spy toys have become. 
	
	 
	
	This fun has culminated in the 
	planned dropping of F-BOMBS (Falling or Ballistically-launched Object that 
	Makes Backdoors) to combat "Bad Men With Guns."
	
	The F-BOMB introduces the idea of disposable surveillance as a guard against 
	forensic evaluation and the ability to track the source of the drop. 
	Creator, Brendan O'Connor, has received DARPA funding to implement a 
	software package into his nearly non-traceable surveillance hardware as 
	cheaply as possible with easy-to-obtain components. 
	
	Back in August, another DIY project was introduced as the 
	
	Wireless Aerial 
	Surveillance Platform (WASP - since renamed Project Vespid). 
	
	 
	
	This modified military 
	drone was put together from parts legally obtained on the Internet by two 
	hackers (intelligence agency consultants, actually) Rich Perkins and 
	Mike Tassey, who presented their work at a Black Hat conference. 
	
	 
	
	The release was 
	supported by a breathless Wolf Blitzer who seized upon the announcement to 
	illustrate the new threat of being hacked from above. Brendan O'Connor has 
	reduced the DIY cost of similar capabilities to no more than a few hundred 
	dollars with his F-BOMB project.
	
	O'Connor summarizes the value and capabilities of his new Sacrificial 
	Computing for Land and Sky concept in the video that follows, highlighting 
	that his surveillance tool can be planted manually, or dropped from 
	specialized drone aircraft:
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	Similar to the creators of the home-made WASP hacking drone, O'Connor states 
	that he is merely exposing the vulnerabilities of networks and their users.
	
		
		Despite its name, O’Connor says the F-BOMB is designed to be a platform for 
	all sorts of applications on its Linux operating system. Outfit it with 
	temperature or humidity sensors, for instance, and it can be used for 
	meteorological research or other innocent data-collecting. 
		 
		
		But install some Wifi-cracking software or add a $15 GPS module, and it can snoop on data 
	networks or track a target’s location, O’Connor adds. 
		 
		
		As is often the case 
	with these kinds of hacker projects, he says the devices are only intended 
	for penetration testing - finding security flaws in clients’ networks in order 
	to fix them - and wouldn’t comment on what DARPA might do with the technology.
		
		(Source)
	
	
	However, this rings false (or profoundly naive), as O'Connor also has 
	received his funding from the very organization that is at the forefront of 
	using taxpayer money to eradicate privacy around the world, including that 
	of American citizens. 
	
	 
	
	As a result, the government already can:
			 
			
	
		
			- 
			
			Hack your personal information (source) 
- 
			
			Monitor your private phone calls (source) 
- 
			
			Read your private e-mails (source) 
- 
			
			Spoof cell phone towers (source) 
- 
			
			Break down firewalls (source) 
- 
			
			Jam cellular frequencies causing denial of 
		service (source) 
- 
			
			Disrupt and manipulate Wi-Fi signals (source) 
- 
			
			Track your every move (source) 
	
	Although O'Connor said that he wouldn't comment 
	on what DARPA might do with the technology, his own business website Malice 
	Afterthought indicates a solid working relationship with military 
	intelligence:
	
		
		Our principal, Brendan O'Connor, has taught at the US military's cybersecurity school as well as working for both VeriSign and Sun 
	Microsystems in their security divisions; he has also worked for DARPA and 
	startups as a combination engineer, dreamer, and mad scientist capable of 
	making even the most challenging tasks into reality.
	
	
	We should all know by now that we don't have to be technology experts to 
	envision some rather dark applications that are no longer security 
	challenges, but are part of an agenda to fundamentally alter our reality and 
	perceived social contract within a supposedly free society. 
	
	 
	
	That reality has 
	little to do with protecting citizens' data and privacy, and everything to 
	do with covering the tracks of government's ubiquitous intrusion into our 
	private lives, as well as ramping-up their violation of the Constitution by 
	presuming guilt over innocence, and subjecting citizens to their mad science 
	and mad dreams.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Additional sources