magnetosphere,
magnetosphere avatar

Pretty amazing that they can determine it’s not a threat just by looking at the outside of it.

SeaJ,

Who fucking cares? Is there no other news today?

Everythingispenguins,

Nope. I check and that is it. If this didn’t happen then all the new outlets would have had to just say "There is no news today*

catloaf,

It wouldn’t be the first time: www.snopes.com/…/bbc-news-april-18-1930/

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

I am more than ok with more slow news days.

player2, (edited )

Turns out to belong to an amateur hobbyist:
nbcnews.com/…/us-monitoring-high-altitude-balloon…

When did weather balloons become national news? Aren’t there always weather balloons floating around the world? Is it just that this one isn’t registered or something?

The article even states that the infamous “Chinese spy balloon” from last year turned out to have no ability to send information back to China and it wasn’t even from the Chinese government, but from a private company, institution, or individual.

Source: The Pentagon and Biden quoted in this post’s article.

Telodzrum,

There are no private Chinese companies.

doctorcrimson, (edited )

That’s not really how it works, but for sure those balloons aren’t being used for the weather.

player2, (edited )

That is a common misconception and not true. You probably hear about some large state-run enterprises but >84% of businesses in China are private. Today there are several times more private businesses in China than in the US. I work closely with someone who owns their own business in Shenzhen and it doesn’t sound that different than in America.

…csis.org/can-chinese-firms-be-truly-private/

doctorcrimson, (edited )

Those balloons aren’t being used for the weather. The 2023 balloon was a 61M tall Superpressure Balloon with rudder, propeller, and solar power, a total payload of 910 kg. It could be steered and maneuvered, it left China in a straight line then navigated north to approach the USA from Canada. The manufacturer was a defence contractor. Chinese officials actually demanded the craft be returned, which makes absolutely no sense if it really were a civilian aircraft which caused a huge international incident.

player2, (edited )

Turns out it belongs to an amateur hobbyist:

nbcnews.com/…/us-monitoring-high-altitude-balloon…

Maybe I got the previous balloons mixed up. The article on this post states:

Though the Pentagon eventually concluded the balloon did not transmit information back to China, its presence put the U.S. military on high alert for other objects in U.S. airspace. Fighter jets shot down several unidentified objects over the U.S. and Canada over the following weeks.

The military couldn’t find any debris from those objects, and the search was called off due to dangerous weather conditions. Mr. Biden said the unidentified objects were not believed to be connected to China’s spy balloon program.

“The intelligence community’s current assessment is that these three objects were mostly balloons tied to private companies, recreation or research institutions studying weather or conducting other scientific research,” the president said. .

doctorcrimson,

Good news, then.

ME5SENGER_24,

Why are they tracking it? Shoot it down, open it up and figure out it’s purpose

doctorcrimson,

Once they’ve assessed it isn’t a threat they wait for it to be over an area devoid of people before shooting it down. They also have to follow international laws to identify the aircraft and origin to ensure it wasn’t given permission beforehand, but I’m sure the US Airforce stays on top of that.

catloaf,

We don’t want foreign countries shooting down our various craft, to include satellites.

philo,

It’s a Houthi drone way off course 😂

atx_aquarian,
@atx_aquarian@lemmy.world avatar

Favorite convo from the last balloon:

“If that pilot (who shot it down) shoots four more of those, do they get to call themselves an ‘ace’?”

“Uh, I think they just get a big stuffed animal.”

Rentlar,
tal,
@tal@lemmy.today avatar

They had observation balloons in World War I. Could see if those counted.

googles

It looks like it.

businessinsider.com/meet-ace-wwi-pilot-famous-for…

"The callsign of the F-22 that shot down the Chinese spy balloon was a nod to Frank Luke Jr., a legendary World War I pilot who destroyed over a dozen German balloons and several aircraft during his brief time in combat as a member of the United States Army Air Service. For his efforts in the skies above the battlefield, Luke became famous as the “Arizona Balloon Buster,” according to the US Air Force.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Luke

Frank Luke Jr. (May 19, 1897 – September 29, 1918) was an American fighter ace credited with 18 aerial victories, ranking him second among United States Army Air Service pilots after Captain Eddie Rickenbacker during World War I. Luke was the first airman to receive the Medal of Honor and first USAAS ace in a day.

Between September 12 and 29, Luke was credited with shooting down 14 German balloons and four airplanes:[5] Luke achieved these 18 victories during just 10 sorties in eight days, a feat unsurpassed by any pilot in World War I.[1]

So four aircraft and fourteen balloons. Five shootdowns to be an ace, so they must count balloons.

KnightontheSun,

Blow it up so we can learn the gender of the baby!

snooggums,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

And a forest fire!

afraid_of_zombies,

It is time to burn California down again. Been what two whole years since the last gender reveal caused that?

A coworker of mine just did a gender reveal. They went with a cake. I offered to to lend them some road flares and a drone but they said they were good.

bobs_monkey,

As a Californian in a forest, let’s not and say we did.

afraid_of_zombies,

Sorry you don’t like coughing fits and the sky looking like it is the end of the world?

bobs_monkey,

That, and the threat of my house burning down

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