After giving in to Putin/Xi’s demands to not provide starlink internet service over Taiwan, DOD officials are growing nervous about trusting Elon’s Space company with our national secrets

  • Willie@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Aw man, if only there was some sort of space administration that you could invest some of your trillions of dollars into so that your satellites could be launched by a group that you can monitor and trust.

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        To be fair here… The old guard still aren’t working on reuse even after SpaceX not only championed it but actually succeeded and proved reliability.

        The old launch providers are still just throwing their shit away and still cost billions of dollars for launches.

        The Commercial Resupply Service and Commercial Crew Programs have also achieved better standards than NASA had when they started them, and at much cheaper cost than the previous solutions.

        Privatisation isn’t inherently bad, and importantly, the money is still being handled through NASA for oversight.

          • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            No, but they wouldn’t do anything beyond the exact specific minimums of the grant either.

            • Vox@lemmy.world
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              5 days ago

              And you think a private business will do anything more than the minimum of a contract?

            • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              5 days ago

              Huh? Why do you think this? The implication seems to be that they want to pocket the rest or something?

              Let’s not forget, we are talking about NASA here, not a private corporation. Why would an arm of the federal government have any interest in not doing “anything beyond the exact specific minimums of the grant”?

              I cannot speak to building rockets, but I do know about other types of government financing, and I can tell you that the scientists and engineers who would have received such a grant, would have no reason not to use as much of it as possible. In fact, that’s exactly how they would justify a need for more in the future.

              • bean@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                Also does it even SEEM like NASA cuts corners? No. They know people’s lives are at stake. They test and retest and are very dedicated to proper procedure so things don’t get fucked up the wrong way … like when you cut corners.

              • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                NASA aren’t the ones building things. They’re just the ones deciding what the requirements are after Congress gives them a fraction of what they need to accomplish the impossible.

                It’s the likes of Boeing that are building and milking it. And they have never done more than the minimum required, and until competition from SpaceX at a fraction of the cost were experts at milking the Cost Plus contracting they essentially required to do anything space related.

                NASA will never be in charge of building things on their own. Space too much of a cash cow for the Congress Critters to milk via the complexity and obfuscation of the government contract process. Thinking they would be able to bring anything in house is hilarious.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          the money is still being handled through NASA for oversight.

          Oversight of the money is far from the problem here. This is not an issue of cheating the government or mismanagement of money, this is a national security issue.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            4 days ago

            this is a national security issue.

            In some ways, SpaceX delivered too well.

            NASA has been trying to find multiple launch providers but where are they? This is probably not the risk reduction they were going for but it is exactly risk that can be reduced by having multiple providers. However SpaceX succeeded well enough to dominate the field, worldwide

            Where are Bozos and those other guys? Where even is ULA? Where’s that payback on NASA funding?

  • BMTea@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    If you’re going to rely on private firms for your aerospace espionage endeavors, maybe factor in their leader’s sanity before you sign the contract with them.

      • beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        What do you value higher - that one company’s profits or the public? Why are you so selfish? Why can’t you just be happy that that one company gets to hold the entire population hostage over the necessary good or service that they can then monopolise? It’s so much easier to squeeze the poor for all they own when their very survival depends on the things you can hand out or hold back at a whim. Something something the free market will probably prevent abuse or something, so it’s perfectly okay.

    • Burninator05@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      I 100% agree with you but is there someone else in thr US who can reliably launch satellites? I know several othe companies are developing these systems but I don’t think any are anywhere close to Space X’s reliability or capability.

      Space X is doing some awesome stuff and I hate that the awesome has to be tempered by the owner is a piece of shit.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        5 days ago

        They’re only able to do it because they’ve received trillions of dollars from the federal government.

        They should nationalize SpaceX before they ever let someone like Musk get the security clearance needed to be in that position.

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        5 days ago

        SpaceX is wasting government money, they have almost spent all of the money they were given to land people on the moon, on building a rocket that can’t do basic stuff.

        That is not awesome.

        • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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          4 days ago

          A single launch of a Boeing rocket costs as much as the entire R&D for SpaceX rockets. Launches that cost $5 billion with Boeing, cost tens of millions with SpaceX. I can absolutely agree with you that SpaceX is wasting some of the money given to them. But the amount of taxpayer money spent on launches has been massively reduced by them providing an orders of magnitude cheaper and more reliable option.

          There is definitely an argument to be made that they don’t deserve the money, but in the grand scheme of government spending, they have very much reduced it compared to the traditional launch providers.

          And their rockets still have capabilities that no other launch provider has achieved yet. Boeing still wastes all their rockets by making them single use, when SpaceX uses the same rocket many times.

          • stoy@lemmy.zip
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            4 days ago

            Compairing SpaceX and Boeing is wrong when talking about savings.

            Compare a SpaceX launch to a Shuttle launch yo be more accurate, and don’t forget the inflation

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              Damn, we don’t have enough zeros for that. That’s more like the Russian fine against Bozos

            • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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              4 days ago

              There is an important fact about the Space Shuttle: it doesn’t exist anymore. Even if it was cheaper - which it wasn’t - it wouldn’t have meant much today, because today all other existing options are much more expensive. I’m comparing options we have today, and more importantly comparing to the option SpaceX moved the government off of.

              If NASA brings back the space shuttle and it’s cheaper than SpaceX then amazing, let’s go. But they didn’t (because it wouldn’t have been cheaper).

  • Travelator@thelemmy.club
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    5 days ago

    Apply the same standards the rest of us have to meet, revoke his fucking security clearance already! Same for the racist criminal spray painted orange Cheeto, too. This is completely obvious.

    • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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      5 days ago

      IIRC, you’re supposed to report when you’ve had significant contact with Canadians and this motherfucker is talking with Vladimir Putin himself. I can’t imagine he reported that to whoever his clearance is with.

      • BlitzoTheOisSilent@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        When I had my clearance, we were told if we had a conversation with a foreign national at a bar, we had to disclose it, even after we had already received our clearance.

        I was put through a multi-hour polygraph interview from hell, where I was told I didn’t know how to breathe and was threatened with being failed and losing my clearance, because I was having issues remembering online foreign penpals from high school.

        But motherfucker is talking to Putin on the regularly, and he’s a billionaire with billions worth of government contracts? Tell me again, US Government, why any of your citizens should give a fuck about anything, again?

        • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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          5 days ago

          They haven’t made you do that in while. There’s way too many foreign nationals in the U.S., it would be impossible, especially in a city. The standard is ongoing contact/close personal relationships. Having a one-off conversation with a Russian at a bar isn’t going to trigger the requirement unless there’s something suspicious about the conversation itself (like they keep asking about your job).

  • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    5 days ago

    In what would be an unprecedented move, the US needs to nationalize SpaceX in the name of national security.

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      They don’t need to go that far. Just force Musk to divest. (And prosecute him for any crimes he’s committed, but that might be asking too much of the government.)

      • curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 days ago

        They should go that far though.

        This entire position that things are in are a direct result of a certain party trying to privatize space travel, and “run it like a business”, which is how the Challenger disaster happened.

        So wouldn’t be the worst idea to pull waayyyyyy back.

    • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      No, not everything needs to be nationalized. That’s a lazy excuse to solving problems and often just leads to different issues. Look at the fights we have for NASA’s current miniscule budget slice for a perfect example. Our government is dog shit at allocating and running departments like this, primarily because of politics.

      Remember that neither NASA or the military actually build anything themselves, everything is outsourced to companies like SpaceX, Lockheed, Boeing, etc. So you’re advocating all of that to be brought into the government bureaucracy machine with no existing infrastructure to manage it, for it to be smothered to death by politicians trying to “prove” that government doesn’t work.

      Instead, they just need to demand that Elon not have any decision making position at the company to continue getting contracts, blacklist him. As it is, daily SpaceX operations run without Elon. Gwynne Shotwell actually runs the company, regardless of specific titles. Elon doesn’t actually do the engineering work either, so while he may be involved in major decisions, it’s more the overall vision, the company would operate just fine whether he’s there or not. HE is the problem, not SpaceX as a company, and not the entire C-Suite team, just him. Get rid of him and the place runs just like it does now, works towards the same goals, and daily operations and contracts continue as normal,

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        No, not everything needs to be nationalized.

        Good thing no one said everything, just a rocket company that NASA wouldn’t need to outsource to anymore since they would have the facilities to make all the rockets they wanted themselves.

        • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          Problem is that if SpaceX becomes part of NASA, then it’ll be like the space shuttle. It’ll need parts made by every small company that contributed to some random representative in every state, so we’ll end up with 300+ contractors all building critical components.

            • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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              5 days ago

              It could, but that’s not how these types of programs get run. They’re as much about making jobs in specific areas as they are about solving a problem.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                That’s not a very convincing argument. The U.S. has never nationalized a company like SpaceX before. We have no idea how it would be run.

                I don’t find the libertarian “everything the government does is inefficient and corrupt” ideas very compelling.

                • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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                  5 days ago

                  You’re putting words in my mouth and exaggerating my statements. Just look at how the NASA manned space programs have run since the start, AND how they are currently run. Congress puts a lot of stipulations on how they are manufactured. NASA has a big problem with congressional interference.

                  Their science/unmanned programs are different, because congress is more hands off. Those are running just fine. The problem is that SpaceX is a huge cost and has a lot of manufacturing and jobs associated with it. That invites congressional interference.

                  Not only that, but they also have a large commercial presence already with the Starlink. The government doesn’t typically run things like that, so they’ll probably sell of the Starlink portion of the company.

                  It’s not a conspiracy, it’s not libertarian-ism, it’s just how NASA is run. Once the budgets get into the billions, congress can’t keep their hands off it.

                  Yes, there are certainly problems with the Commercial Crew program right now, just look at how Starliner is run. We probably won’t get a capsule from Boeing, because they don’t have an incentive to finish, due to the fact that it’s not a cost+ program like the SLS is. SLS is also constrained by politics, they are required to use so many Shuttle parts, just to keep those sub-contractors happy.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        they wouldn’t need to take SpaceX. just replace Musk’s ownership/control with Some Advisory Board™️staffed by project managers that know the fuck they’re doing. SpaceX wouldn’t necessarily need to be closed- just a change in ownership.

        Granted, that’s pratically a pipe dream since congress has been intent on privatization instead of having NASA be in that role.

        after about a decade, the government then sells its stake off slowly; probably reaping a rather huge profit while it’s at it.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        5 days ago

        lazy excuse

        Lol what? You think that would be easy? Like when Michael tries to “declare bankruptcy” in The Office?

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Yet another reason billionaires shouldn’t exist. Dude is making international policy based on requests from foreign leaders, along with having conversations with them while launching the US government’s satellites of national security importance.

  • orcrist@lemm.ee
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    5 days ago

    You want to trust him after what happened in Ukraine? Are you out of your mind? And he’s admitted that he chats with Putin on a regular basis.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    5 days ago

    Satellite internet already existed way, way before Starlink. You know, good satellite internet where you have a single geostationary satellite giving you high speed instead of these small Leo ones that will fall out of orbit within a decade…

    Why would Taiwan even need Starlink?

    Having said that: fuck Musk, and yeah, they should never have allowed this dumb ass anywhere near rockets

    • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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      The traditional satellite internet is slow and high latency. With the Starlink approach, it is indeed an issue that the satellites need to be continuously replaced, but it does provide a superior service to the user, and combined with SpaceX often launching them “almost free” by piggybacking on free space around their customer’s payloads and not having to pay anyone for launches otherwise, it does come out cheaper than the old satellite internet.

      But that’s just the technology. The fact Musk is anywhere near that project makes Starlink a liability.

      • NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        The vast majority of starlink are launched on their own flights.

        They get a few freebies here and there but it’s not the defining factor of their success.

        The success is their reusable rockets and turning satellites into a smaller mass manufactured item amd getting economies of scale, not a giant super expensive item.

        Edit: also they made reusable rockets then had to figure out a use for them as there wasn’t enough global launch demand. They made their own demand. Then they used their own flights to test riskier things like the rockets with the most launches to fine tune the system without risking customer payloads.

        Edit: Also for reference launch masses and dish costs

        • Hughesnet JUPITER 3 (EchoStar XXIV) has a launch mass of 9200kg. ($445 million)
        • Starlink V1 is 260kg (200k USD)
        • Starlink V2 Mini (current) 740kg (800k USD)
        • Starlink V2 (future satellites for starship) 1250kg (??? USD)

        And obviously the Jupiter 3 will stay up there forever so they can recoup costs if starlink doesn’t kill them, but thats a lot higher up front cost and they aren’t making a lot of them so they don’t get efficiencies of scale. Instead they’re made with very custom stuff meant to last forever which costs big $$$.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Geostationary satellite internet is not “good.” There’s about 200ms of latency built into the system because of the distance to the satellite, which means you can’t use it for anything real-time. If it’s all you have it’s better than nothing, but LEO satellite Internet is a lot more useful.

    • thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world
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      Old sat internet is not high speed unless you have your own private sat and are willing to spend crazy amounts of money and they suffer from very high latency. I’m a musk hater but starlink preforms pretty well. My dream is that the US will nationalize spacex and remove musks influence. Nothing but a cancer

  • ofcourse@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    Wtf is this article? If there’s a doubt about someone’s national security clearance, revoke it immediately until further review. Being anxious means nothing. Do or don’t.

  • Snapz@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    “As much as I hate elon…”

    “I hate elon as much as the next guy, but…”

    “Look, I’m no elon fan, but…”

    I’m sure you all know, but to be clear, when you see the above in elon posts… these are the beginnings of sentences from people who don’t hate elon. They are sentences from people who like elon, but think you will hate them, or not consider their opinions, if they say out loud that they do, in fact, like elon.

    On a separate but related note, this is elon speaking at a hate-filled rally featuring a series of bigoted speakers, including himself. The rally very intentionally cosplayed an American Nazi rally that famously occurred at Madison Square garden in the 1930s. To emphasize how on the nose this all was, elon wore a specially made hat - a hat that very deliberately used an especially prominent font from the Nazi era. They are literally SCREAMING it in your face and tattooing it on their foreheads

    elon has done nothing good or admirable with his life and elon will will not do anything good or admirable with his life. You can’t compartmentalize your opinion on this, he sucks, on the whole.

    • Rubanski@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      Fraktur was a remnant from Kaiser times. Nazis were quite against it, maybe because of different reasons you might assume. Hitler said this: “In a hundred years, our language will be the European language. The countries of the East, North and West will learn our language in order to be able to communicate with us. The prerequisite for this is that the script known as Gothic will be replaced by what we previously called the Latin script and now call normal script.”