Would there be any benefit in launching a pirate satellite? Similar to pirate radio operating on the laws of the sea, it could potentially provide unregulated internet or data services.
>>59748212
>satellite
Satellites are an easy way to for Globalists to hide the flat earth truth. They don't actually exist.
>>59748212
You'd need at least three stationary geostationary satellites for world wide coverage. Come up with a billion dollars and launch them
>>59748245
If the earth were round, why is google maps flat?
>>59748270
I was thinking that there's quite a bit of money to be made in piracy - Kim Dot Com made a quite a sum yearly through ads and subscription services. Throw in some crowd sourcing, wait for satellite technology to become more affordable as other pursuits in space become more competitive and push prices down (such as india wanting to become a satellite launching nation) and it could be that some company could launch them under the idea of say, cloud computing.
Would there be any benefit to having a satellite piracy network? Free from regulation? More difficult to shutdown? Could it be profitable? Would intellectual property rights cease to have effect?
>>59748270
If it's not geostationary, then your ground stations can just wait for the satellite to appear overhead.
>billion dollars
Microsats are pretty cheap to launch, or so I've read.
>>59748245
How does you're gps work then?
>>59748326
>How does you're gps work then?
Like it would on a 2d plane?
>>59748335
gps unit picks up signals from transmitters on the ground?
does that mean you can walk to one of the transmitters?
>>59748369
You can already