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Title: Squatting in Space
Author: Mixael S Laufer
Date: 8th Feb 2019
Language: en
Topics: anarcho-transhumanism, space, science, squatting
Source: https://anarchotranshuman.org/post/182665919252/our-fourth-issue-click-image-for-imposed-pdf

Mixael S Laufer

Squatting in Space

Everybody thinks they want to be an astronaut when they grow up. When

people learn that space programs are controlled by governments which

spend obscene amounts of money on them instead of feeding or educating

their citizens, and only take the most privileged members of society,

that dream melts, and people get down to the shitty business of

survival.

Space travel sucks. Everything about it sucks: it's dangerous, it's

expensive, it's unavailable to almost everyone while simultaneously

being romanticized to the point where everyone wants to do it.

Not well publicized is the fact that there are defunct craft in space

which are lying fallow, just waiting to be refurbished in space and

re-inhabited. The reason this is not widely publicized is because space

programs don't want the flack associated with throwing away

multi-billion dollar hardware and burning it to vapor by letting it fall

into the atmosphere at 7,000MPH.

Seemingly as a belated april fools day joke, on april 2nd this year the

burnt remains of the space-station Tiangong-1 crashed into the pacific

ocean.

That's like buying a Bugatti Veyron, and then instead of changing the

oil at 1000 miles, just sending the thing over a guardrail. The sticker

price on the Veyron is $1.7 million. Comparatively, the cost of the

Tiangong-1 clocks in at $3.1 billion. So, really, letting that fall into

the pacific ocean is like dumping 1,800 Veyrons over a guardrail before

the oil change. And that's over triple the total that have ever been

produced anyway.

Over 21,000 pieces of space trash larger than 10 centimeters and half a

million bits of junk between 1 cm and 10 cm are estimated to circle the

planet. This is a huge problem, because when things are zooming around

at 7,000 miles per hour, and they hit each other, bad things happen to

delicate scientific instruments, even the ones hardened for space.

The traditional methods are to track these, and or “de-orbit” them,

meaning to crash them, so they are no longer in circulation. But better

if they were instead used as parts to fix up the abandoned spacecraft to

then be inhabited by brave space-steaders. What if we didn't wait for

progressive space programs to give their unused tools to the public

domain for the world to use, but instead just seized the damn things

before the orbits decayed so much they started to catch on fire? One of

the most beautiful tenets of the squatting philosophy is that functional

infrastructure should not be allowed to sit fallow, if it could be used

by others.

If one regards legality to be worth anything, space is technically

international waters, and so is the right of every human being to

explore as they wish. But much as peasants of old couldn't sail the

ocean, because they couldn't afford a ship or crew, modern folks with a

desire to travel in space are often barred from it de facto, as they

can't afford a spaceworthy craft.

While legally you are a pirate, because space it covered under

international maritime law, it's important to recall that there is

nobody to come after you: for the same reason governments spend so much

to send space vehicles up, they can't afford to send anyone after you to

stop you. Flip them all the bird from 26,000 miles up.

Many people and organizations are already gunning to try to turn space

into just another market for the extraction of resources and exchange.

Let's get in there first, and keep it wild. In 2015 the so-called “Space

Act” was signed into US law, violating the Outer Space Treaty of 1967,

by allowing claims to be laid to extraterrestrial territories and

resources. This was a result of caving to the asteroid-mining lobbyists,

who are clearly only daunted by the fact that there aren't indigenous

people on asteroids on whom they can commit a genocide like in the good

ol' days of colonial resource extraction.

However, we should hardly be surprised: the first piece of space

legislation the united states ever passed was in 1958, drafted moments

after Sputnik-1 launched, to ensure that space would be treated as a

capitalist market, and not a communist playground.

More space stations are going to be built, and they will similarly be

abandoned. We need to be ready to pick up the garbage. Space will be the

new Jakarta.

There is a point in the stratosphere where there is a peak temperature

of about 0 C just over 50km up. Manned high altitude balloons can â—¦C

just over 50km up. Manned high altitude balloons can easily reach this

spot, and have done so twice recently by the skydivers Felix Baumgartner

and Alan Eustace, both setting records for freefall skydives. If they

had prepared just a little differently, they might have stayed up there,

instead of jumping back to earth.

Industrious folk will use high-altitude balloons to get high enough,

close to the mesosphere, and will use booster rockets or use a skyhook

momentum exchange tether systems to catapult themselves up by crashing

their balloons, and jump the gap to the thermosphere where the abandoned

space stations are, and attach home made add-ons with aquaculture

farming units, and new models of zero waste permaculture will be

developed in real-time adaptive trial runs.

The new shantytowns will be zero-G raft cities in orbit. There will be a

new group of people who transcend race and class, and become the

space-squatters on jerry-rigged space garbage that has been upcycled.

The Uru-nuevo, Xin-Tanka, or Makoko-akotun.

Exploring space has a genuine possibility of testing new economic and

social models. You have to truly start from scratch, because there is

literally nothing up there. Can you maintain? It is a question of will,

technology, and luck. Let's see.

As the development of technology for space travel progresses, the

detritus will be filtered through Shenzhen just like all technologies,

and we'll have access to last year's technology, which still works just

as well.

Better than the state funded space programs, or the commercially funded

space programs, the discoveries that will happen by space explorers

unbeholden to overlords will be of a scope heretofore never imagined. We

will learn about psychology when people who were not screened spend

indefinite periods of time in confined spaces with a small group of

people. We will learn about astrobiology when we see how the microbiome

of an unsanitized space station develops.

We will learn about nutrition, as people eat in a closed-loop system for

long periods of time. New experiments will be run on particle physics,

using the vacuum of space, instead of the ultra-high vacuum systems

which are so expensive on earth. Art of new media will come to be, and

we will be in awe. Most importantly, ideas and discoveries will be made

which are so divergent from our present thinking that they will spawn

new fields of inquiry. So much will come from what so many will call

reckless, and what the truly free will call a testament to the human

spirit.

Maybe, the first people to settle on Mars, or Enceladus, or Europa, or

on little chips in the Oort Cloud, won't be the agents of a state or of

a megalomaniacal billionaire, but just people who decided they wanted to

go. They will develop custom genetically modified organisms artificially

adapted to live on those places once thought to be too hostile to

support life. We will see entire artificial ecosystems of synthetic

astrobiology, which will develop both organically, and artificially, but

will have started entirely artificially.

Creative solutions borne out of necessity, way beyond the risk profile

set by investors or oversight politicians will create new techniques of

space exploration and travel. Will things fail? Undoubtedly, but we will

learn from that too.

Burt Monroe set records that will never be broken because he didn't have

safety gear. This is why people who are sufficiently brave can get to

space if they really want.

Let's not forget the flow chart model of science:

Flow chart model of science: Blow Things Up -> Analyze Results: If Yes, Science; If No, Entertainment; If Pretend, Mythbusters

Comandeering From Afar

Now, the number of actually inhabitable spacecraft which have been

disused over the years is small, but the number of functional items in

space itself is quite high.

There are 98 derelict satellites currently orbiting earth. Most of these

still have power from their nuclear radioisotope thermoelectric

generators, so they still could be running. Their owners just got bored,

and decided to waste taxpayer dollars on something new. If you hacked

in, you could get them running again, and do more science. This is the

essence of hacking: do more with less.

Satellies are so often abandoned, there is a technical term for it:

passivization. Isn't that awful, on like, every level?

The glory of hacking is that we can occupy places/spaces/objects without

being physically present. Let's use the unused satellites which could be

giving free cell phone service to everyone, and give it. Let's give

satellite radio to everyone. Not just to listen, but to broadcast. Let's

hijack the working satellites and bring free internet to everyone.

Outernet [before it was called Othernet] originally was a company trying

to bring free open-source internet to rural areas. You could build a

receiver with a raspberry π and a minidish, and be able to download a

curated block of the most popular data on the internet every day. But

now it is just another cog in the nonprofit industrial complex trying to

make people buy their proprietary hardware, and subscription services,

while pretending to be altruistic. Let's do better.

The possibilities for this are endless: data havens sending huge volumes

of IP down, monitoring drone activity from space, open-source space

surveillance of government black sites, pirate radio from space, maybe

even a new internet.

Right now, the old iridium satellites are being decommissioned. They are

being replaced with new ones, but the old ones still work really well.

Some of them are so-called “hot spares” which have never even been used!

They were low-orbit non-geosynchronous communication satellites, and

what is super cool is that they were a mesh network. You communicate

directly to your local satellite, and it bounced the signal amongst

neighbor satellites until it gets to the one closest to your intended

recipient. Imagine if instead of letting these billion dollar spacecraft

just fall out of orbit and burn up in the atmosphere, or crash into the

ocean, a group of dedicated hackers used the information that Stefan

“Sec" Zehl and Schneider, and their group managed to get by

reverse-engineering the system in order to hack it, broke in, and kept

them aloft in order to build an open global satellite data network that

everyone can use with cheap open source hardware, like the r0ket and

rad10 badges.

Of course this brings up the romantic notion of the freedom of

radiowhich once existed: anyone who can grab the signal can listen, and

anyone who can send a signal can be heard. This was the freedom that

radio amateurs of the 20s 30s and 40s felt, before the FCC decided that

electromagnetic waves were the domain of the government. Also similar to

the freedom of the early days of the internet, and more recently of the

various darknets out there. The problem with the darknets is that they

still sit on top of the infrastructure of the internet as it exists, and

despite the magic of various subterfuges to disguise traffic, it's

becoming harder and harder to maintain open channels online.

I dream of industrious hackers finding whitespace in the broadcast

spectrum, and setting up independent uplink/downlink systems with

upcycled tv dishes and tinfoil coated umbrellas.

We could stop fighting for “net neutrality” if we just built one of our

own.

Take the Data and Run

So let's say that you don't have the stomach for space travel, and you

don't quite have the chops to hack into a defunct satellite and get it

running again. There is still more occupation which can be done.

The objects in space are still spewing out information, and you can

reach out and take it, even the disused ones. NOAA-9 went up in 1984,

and you can still hear its transmissions, which have been likened to a

drunkard whistling. All you need to do is build yourself a little YAGI

antenna out of coathangers and coax cable, or chicken wire and

refrigerator tubing, and you can listen. Check the timetable for when it

is due to fly over your location and listen to 136.770. If you jack some

VHF stuff into the system, you can transmit as well. That's illegal

without a license, but let's not let the law stand in the way of good

extraplanetary communications.

There is so much out there to be caught. Once you start listening, it's

hard to stop. This is why amateur radio enthusiasts are so insufferable

in their endless enthusiasm. In the 1995 film Heat the character Kelso

is pitching a job to Neil, and they have the following exchange:

KELSO: Like I was saying that’s not really an estimate, these are exact

figures. I have a printout here of the cashflow of the bank for the past

few months.

NEIL: How do you get this information?

KELSO: It just comes to you. This stuff just flies through the air. They

send this information out, I mean it’s just beamed all over the fucking

place; all you have to know is how to grab it. See, I know how to grab

it.

The elements to doing so are fairly straightforward: you need an

antenna, a filter so you are just getting the part you want, and then a

computer to interpret the data stream. A linux box with a DVB-S card

issufficient, and there are plenty of tools which will let you tune to

get the specifics you are looking for, and dump the contents from a

stream into audio, video, and data decoders.

Free-to-air, and Wildfeeds are constantly coming down off of satellites

with an incredible amount of content, which you can just grab. Are you

still paying for your dish TV subscription? No need. You can grab NASA's

feed off of the Horizons-1 satellite at 127â—¦W, You can grab the DoD news

off AMC-1 at 103â—¦W, and Al Jazeera english is on Galaxy-19 97â—¦W. The

list goes on.

The Meek Shall Inherit the Stars

With all but a dozen or so locations on the surface of the earth claimed

and ruled by one government or another, space is one of the next logical

options for autonomous zones. Like everything which is sufficiently

different from the status-quo to allow for new paradigms, access to

space is being cloistered away from those without influence. However,

like everything which has come before, real people will find ways to

subvert the systems for the benefit of the people, instead of the

rulership.

Don't wait for the gatekeepers to let you play in space. Go when you

like.