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MIBack in 2012, researchers demonstrated a surveillance system capable of tracking a single vehicle across an entire city in real time.
The technology came from a project called Gorgon Stare, developed for the United States Air Force. Mounted on drones or aircraft, it captures massive aerial imagery that allows analysts to monitor movement across large urban areas simultaneously.
Instead of watching one street corner like a typical security camera, these systems record entire neighborhoods at once. Analysts can zoom in, follow vehicles or people across multiple blocks, and even rewind footage to see where someone came from hours earlier.
The result is something closer to a city-wide time machine than a normal camera feed.
Systems like this were originally designed for military operations overseas, where teams needed to track vehicles, monitor patterns, and identify suspicious movement across large environments.
What makes the demonstration fascinating is the timeline.
This level of wide-area tracking capability already existed more than a decade ago.
Technology rarely moves backward.
It compounds.
So the real question is:
If this existed in 2012… imagine what the systems look like today. 👀
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