Billionaire Adds Laser Shield To Yacht 16
IamSmee writes "Russian Billionaire Roman Abramovich's 557 ft yacht, Eclipse, now boasts a paparrazi-foiling shield of laser beams. From the article: 'Infrared lasers detect the electronic light sensors in nearby cameras, known as charge-coupled devices. When the system detects such a device, it fires a focused beam of light at the camera, disrupting its ability to record a digital image. The beams can also be activated manually by security guards if they spot a photographer loitering.'"
How does this work? (Score:2, Informative)
I'll tell ya. Optics systems have a property called retroreflection. Shine a laser into a lens and some of it will return right back to the source. A scanning laser can find the location of an optical system pointed at it quite quickly.
You could even do it with a bright IR flash and some image processing to look for the focused reflection. Just like spotting a racoon by the side of the road at night. Then you point your disruption laser at the target.
And in warfare, it's quite easy to use this property to f
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I got my eyes closed. You can't see me. Naner Naner Naner
That only works on the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
In tonight's news: Rich jerk gets scammed. (Score:2)
And if the glass (the optical lens) itself is being detected (although TFA says it's the CCD being detected), then ALL optics would trigger it, including everyone's eyeglasses. And what about all the taillights (
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TFA is probably wrong (not that I've wasted time reading TFA ... of course not ; this is SlashDot). I don't know if they've tried to patent this, but the principle is pretty obvious. Most (not all, but most) lens systems have one or more target-facing elements that are curves (almost always spherical, because they're easiest to make)
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I don't know.
Time to dig out those old film cameras! (Score:2, Informative)
If the laser beams only detect and disable CCDs, then, in theory, conventional cameras should be unaffected.
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Not at all.
The picture is either old, or of a different ship.
The system has nothing to do with the little red light, it senses the light processing unit of the camera and blinds it with a laser. You could cover up that little red light all you wanted and it wouldn't have any effect, your photo would still be crapped. No digital camera, didital video recorder, even camera phone will work.
A poster above asked if it would affect a regular film camera and no, it wouldn't. Not unless the system was manually a
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Lasers... (Score:1)
I have one simple request (Score:1, Funny)
And that is to have sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads! Now evidently my cycloptic colleague informs me that that cannot be done. Ah, would you remind me what I pay you people for, honestly? Throw me a bone here!
Scrapbookers Foiled (Score:1)
I wonder what the range is on this thing. I hope they thought to not include the deck in the targetable area, otherwise I'll bet that he has relatives who'll be furious. Then again, he won't have to worry about those pesky family scrapbooks anymore!