More track-and-trace technology.
SPACECOWS PROJECT
You may think of the name “SpaceCows” as some type of b-grade comedy movie title.
But it’s also the name of a project run by a group of indigenous rangers in remote Australia, who are conducting a herd surveillance project via “a space-based satellite system”.
This project for the farmers has been developed in partnership with Microsoft and CSIRO.
The four-year program involves “…catching, tagging, and tracking 1,000 wild cattle and buffalo in north-east Arnhem land in the Northern Territory and Queensland’s Gulf of Carpentaria”.
That’s surveillance across roughly across 22,000 square kilometres, with Microsoft stating the program brings together “…on the ground Indigenous knowledge, space technology and artificial intelligence” with a goal to create “the world’s largest remote herd management system”.
Australia’s “SmartHerd Management Program” will see $4 million poured into the initiative.
CSIRO scientist, Andrew Hoskins, said the tracking project was likely “the largest … from a wildlife or a buffalo tracking perspective, that’s ever been done”, especially in Australia.
Introduced by pioneer farmers in Australia’s far north in the 1800s, buffalo went wild in the mid-1900s when settlements were abandoned and stock was set loose.
Today, feral animals — both buffalo and cattle — roam as a threat to the ecology and economy of Northern Australia, which is known as the Top End.
But don’t fear: ‘Smart technology’ is coming in as the ‘solution’ to ‘assist rangers’ with tasks they have done for decades now, as Big Brother watches the Top End from the sky.
“SmartHerd Management” is the overall emerging concept this falls under; one that sees ‘unmanaged’ cows and buffalos “…electronically tracked using GPS satellite tracking tags”.
Even our wildlife is not exempt from the mass surveillance state and invasive tracking systems.
For you see: Yes, these wild animals are a problem, but we should all be keeping an eye on what else these systems will be able to track when the time comes.
‘Convenience’ and ‘better efficiency’ has always come with a hidden Trojan Horse inside of it.
‘EYES IN THE WILD’
Once again, ‘tin-foil hat Ethan’ is back again to warn you to keep an eye on all of this.
If you look at the CSIRO website, we find it will produce “a virtual replica of the landscape”, which immediately raises red flags as we move into Agenda 2030 ‘land management’ territory.
I have been detailing on this website for the past few years the plethora of surveillance systems and technologies that are being introduced for ‘wildlife management and tracking’.
A very suspicious trend is emerging.
Earlier this year, TOTT News revealed the scope of ‘bushfire recovery surveillance program’, with 1,100 AI motion-triggered cameras rigged across south-east locations, capturing images in seconds of detection.
Artificial intelligence and “an army of new sensor cameras” are being used to ‘track the recovery of animals impacted by bushfires’, in one of the most extensive surveillance programs undertaken.
In August, the Department of Transport and Main Roads in Queensland announced that they will be flying thermal drones over multiple Logan regions at night time as a means of ‘wildlife monitoring’.
Authorities told residents to ‘not be alarmed’ if they see drones flying around at night..
Speaking of drones, it has been promoted they could soon replace helicopters and planes in providing emergency crews ‘with more rapid and accurate data for coming bushfire threats’.
The sudden spread of sophisticated surveillance technology for ‘nature research’ is an eyebrow-raiser.
There is also a very strange irony between the systems these animals are being monitored with and the exact same mechanisms now engulfing the ‘human herd’ as well.
Let’s not forget that the sheep industry is about to witness a major technological trial, as AI company Genesmith gears up to launch its “innovative” sheep facial recognition trial.
The company promises to “revolutionise sheep management”, using AI to “identify a flock’s most productive ewes” and, in turn, “improve their bloodlines”.
While most may see this as unjustified paranoia, we must remember that ‘land management’ is a major part of Agenda 2030, with the goal to have most of the world ‘unrestricted’ to human activity.
What better way to enforce these plans that to erect multiple surveillance systems out in the wild itself?
The vision is for most Australians to be confined to their own ‘smart city’ prisons in the future, and combined with regional surveillance units, these systems will also monitor the human herd as well.
Or, maybe I am just ‘crazy’ and thinking about it too much.
What do you think about the continued introduction of ‘wildlife surveillance’ programs?
Be sure to leave your thoughts in the comment section below!
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NOT to be Trusted – Indigenous ‘A.I.Dead’ or Not! NO ‘VOICE’ SWINDLE? = WELL, COME IN SPINNER!
Bio DiverCITY, EXACTLY ‘THE GAME’! NO ‘Veils & Mystic’ Required!
OH! & a ‘Collaboration’ of MicroSoft & THE CSIRO – Who’s Next? Raytheon, Boeing, BAE – 5 Eyes’? Even THE ‘Cattle’ AIN’T SAFE = NO BULL!
Wellness
When they microchip us they will do the same thing to us (if we let them)
The Billy and Melinda Gates Foundation has partnered with the Kenyan gum’mint to do that with children age 0 – 5 years to track vax status.
I have a sneaky suspicion this surveillance is rolling out across all national parks throughout Australia, the government is obsessed with tracking your every move sadly.
It’s certainly going to be part of the great cull on humanity planned by the 1%