Doc Edward Morbius ⭕​ · @dredmorbius
2071 followers · 14640 posts · Server toot.cat

44 bits

So, a redditor tracked down the location of a monolith placed in the Utah desert a few years ago, recently discovered by authorities, who did not disclose where it was.[1]

It's relatively well known that 33 distinct bits is enough to uniquely identify any individual person now alive on Earth.[2]

Geospatially, assuming 10m2 resolution, 44 bits is enough to identify any unique region on Earth's land surface (46 bits buys you the oceans).

Searching for a ~1m2 monolith visually within a 10m2 square is reasonable.

GNU units:

You have: ln((.3 * 4 * (earthradius^2) * pi)/10m^2)/ln(2)
Definition: 43.798784
You have: ln((1 * 4 * (earthradius^2) * pi)/10m^2)/ln(2)
Definition: 45.535749

49 bits buys 1m accuracy, 63 1cm, 69 1mm. Anywhere on Earth, land or sea.

For comparison, cellphone positioning accuracy is typically 8--600m:

  • 3G iPhone w/ A-GPS ~ 8 meters
  • 3G iPhone w/ wifi ~ 74 meters
  • 3G iPhone w/ Cellular positioning ~ 600 meters

communityhealthmaps.nlm.nih.go

gps.gov/systems/gps/performanc

The power of disparate data traces to rapidly narrow down search spaces on a specific item, individual, or location, is what makes aggreggation so powerful, and terrifying.

Notes:

  1. old.reddit.com/r/geoguessr/com news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2

  2. web.archive.org/web/2016030401

#bigdata #privacy4 #location #33bits #44bits #data #deanonimization #dataareliability #surveillance #surveillancestate #surveillancecapitalism

Last updated 4 years ago