Tatiana Bazzichelli on Wed, 4 Sep 2019 17:48:20 +0200 (CEST)


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Re: <nettime> Flying in Berlin's Sky, an Afternoon Investigation - September 22


Dear Harv,

you get here the answer directly from Emmanuel Freudenthal, who I am
quoting:

"Flightradar, Flightaware and all the websites apart from one
(ADSB-Exchange) remove many aircrafts from the data that they present on
their website.

More than 80% of all military aircraft and 60% of all government
aircraft aren't shown.
http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/files/10013/Art%2016%20Utilizing%20Air%20Traffic%20Communications%20for%20OSINT%20on%20State%20and%20Gover....pdf

Of course they are the most interesting ones to investigate. So by
installing our own antennas there's no filter or censorship."

You are welcome to come to our workshop to find out more!

All the best,

Tatiana

On 04.09.19 17:17, Harv Stanic Staalman wrote:
> Hi, 
> it sounds interesting, but we already built Flightradar24 a live air traffic tracking. 
> So how that differs from it? 
> 
> my best
> 
> hss
> 
> Sent from my BlackBerry?
>   Original Message  
> From: Tatiana Bazzichelli
> Sent: Wednesday 4 September 2019 17:11
> To: nettime-l@kein.org
> Subject: <nettime> Flying in Berlin's Sky,	an Afternoon Investigation - September 22
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> I would like to invite you to register to our forthcoming workshop!
> Few spots are still available, if you love to get more into OSint (Open
> Source Intelligence) and have fun with us tracking planes on a Sunday
> afternoon!
> 
> FLYING IN BERLIN'S SKY, AN AFTERNOON INVESTIGATION
> Date: Sunday, 22 September 2019
> Time: 12:00 - 18:00 - Berlin
> 
> Where: We will start the workshop at Tempelhofer Feld (meeting spot:
> https://goo.gl/maps/Tum3pz6jWjokdYQH9, close to U6 Paradestr) and finish
> the day at SUPERMARKT Berlin, Mehringpl. 9, 10969 Berlin.
> 
> Cost: 30 Euros
> Language: English
> Registration: The number of participants is limited to 20. Booking is
> essential. Please get your ticket here:
> https://pretix.eu/disruptionlab/citevidence/
> Material: Please bring your laptop.
> 
> ++++++++++++++++++++
> 
> Flying in Berlin's sky, an Afternoon Investigation is a guided research
> into the people flying over Berlin. Every day, aircrafts criss-cross the
> airspace above the city: private jets, military planes, and the regular
> tourist flights. Where do they go? Who owns them? What are they doing?
> If you head to most websites tracking planes, you’ll only see the
> scheduled Lufthansa or Eurowings flights. Boring.
> 
> In this real-time investigation, we’ll first head outdoors to
> Tempelhofer Feld and setup our own antennas to detect all the things
> flying above us. Then, we’ll bring the data back to the “lab” at
> Supermarkt to analyse it, find some interesting planes and investigate
> them. You don’t know what we’ll find, and neither do we!
> 
> At the end of this workshop, you’ll be able to setup your own ADSB
> antenna to detect planes (which you can buy for under €50) and analyse
> the data you collect.
> 
> ++++++++++++++++++++
> Workshop instructors:
> 
> Emmanuel Freudenthal (Freelance Investigative Journalist, Dictator
> Alert, FR/KY).
> Emmanuel Freudenthal is a freelance reporter based in Nairobi who has
> been conducting investigations all over Africa for a decade. He focuses
> on stories that break entirely new ground, from nerdy data analysis to
> war reporting, Two of his corruption investigations that used public
> documents, such as financial reports and court judgements, have led to
> ongoing police inquiries in Australia and Canada. He's also crunched
> data to calculate the time that Cameroon's President Paul Biya has spent
> on private trips abroad (4.5 years). As part of a BBC team, he won a
> Peabody award for an open-source investigation finding the soldiers who
> murdered two women and two children while filming themselves on a
> smartphone. His stories have been published by the BBC, Le Monde, The
> New Humanitarian, Paris Match, Sydney Morning Herald, The Daily
> Telegraph, African Arguments, Journal de Montréal, TV5 and others.
> Emmanuel studied economics at UTS in Sydney, then anthropology and
> politics at the University of Oxford.
> 
> Sector035 (InfoSec, Geolocation & OSINT, NL)
> Sector035 is a security officer at a big company, and besides that he
> loves to share his passion for open source intelligence. He does this
> mostly online via his weekly newsletter (medium.com/week-in-osint), as
> member of the OSINT collective 'OSINTcurious' (osintcurio.us) and he is
> part of the Quiztime crew, that offers fun training for researchers and
> journalists.
> 
> ++++++++++++++++++++
> This workshop is a co-production between the Disruption Network Lab and
> Supermarkt Berlin. It is part of Disruption Network Lab’s conference
> Citizens of Evidence: Independent Investigations for Change curated by
> Tatiana Bazzichelli, taking place at Studio 1, Kunstquartier Bethanien,
> 20 - 21 September, 2019.
> https://www.disruptionlab.org/citizens-of-evidence
> 


-- 
Tatiana Bazzichelli // Artistic Director
Disruption Network Lab
http://disruptionlab.org
Twitter: @disruptberlin // @t_bazz
PGP: disruptionlab.org/pgp
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