It's such a weird thing to hear,Kalakal it seems counter-intuitive: London City Airport is building a new air traffic control tower that will be completely digital and manned by a group of human controllers who will be over 100 miles away.
SEE ALSO: Prepare to have your face scanned at airports across AmericaHigh-definition video will be transmitted to the remote location, providing the human controllers with 360-degree video and live sound so that the controllers will feel like they're still at the airport even though they're far away.
The big advantage here: the high-definition visuals, provided by over a dozen different "pan-tilt-zoom" cameras, will allow controllers to see things in finer details than they could with the naked eye with a 30X zoom, like spotting rogue drones that pose a danger.
Nats Air Traffic Control (NATS), which is helping with the new system, outlined other big advantages the system will bring, like data provided via augmented reality video.
They will also have real-time information, including operational and sensory data, to build an augmented reality live view of the airfield. For example, the ability to overlay the images with weather information, on-screen labels, radar data, aircraft call signs, or to track moving objects.
It'll be the first UK airport to use the technology, though the system has been in use at a pair of airports in Sweden.
Steve Anderson, of NATS, told the BBC, "They give the controller more information in terms of what they can see, what they can hear."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But there are still reasons for skepticism, mostly over the digital security of the system which will deliver all of those videos and other relevant information, especially given last week's huge ransomware attack.
Declan Collier, London City Airport chief executive, told the BBC, "we are very confident that the systems we're putting in place here are secure, they're safe, they're managed very well." An airport spokesperson also told NBC News that the system has been "stress-tested by IT security experts" and the company in charge is prepared "to guard against the latest threats."
But no communication is completely safe.
Jason Sabin, Chief Security Officer of security solutions company DigiCert, elaborated on some of the biggest threats to a system like this in a conversation with Mashable.
"The number one threat would be default configuration. They purchase the camera from the manufacturer, they pull it out of the box, set it up and plug it in and say they're ready to go."
The dangers here, according to Sabin, include having default passwords and no encryption that make such internet of things (IoT) devices susceptible to attack, such as the September 2016 Mirai botnet distributed denial of service attacks (DDoS) on Krebs Security.
Mirai became even more well-known in October 2016 when it was used in the large-scale attack on domain name servers host Dyn, which led to the shut down of major sites like Twitter, Spotify and Paypal.
Encryption and authentication are also keys, says Sabin. "Encryption is very important but authentication is just as important because you want to make sure you're corrected to the right person and that the right person is connected" to the device.
"If you're the air traffic controller who's supposed to have to access to this, they are going to be authenticating to the cameras and the cameras need to make sure that it is the air traffic controller and not a malicious user who's trying to gain access to the camera network."
A spokesperson for NATS told Mashable, "Understandably we don't ever go into details about the cyber security measures we take, but it is something we take very seriously and the new system is designed to be resilient and complies with cyber security best practice for protecting critical national infrastructure."
Bears, Abortion, Mechanical Pencils—All at the County FairThe Art of Sandwich Making“Purple Elegy”: A Poem for Prince, by Rowan Ricardo PhillipsTwo Poems by Nathaniel MackeyNew York ValuesJanine di Giovanni: The Art of War ReportingCancel Your Plans—the Guggenheim Has a Solid Gold ToiletJim Comstock’s “West Virginia Hillbilly,” A Newspaper for the AgesH.L. Mencken, Unforgivable and UnforgettableOn Eleanor Perenyi’s “Green Thoughts”Stephanie Danler on “Sweetbitter” & Reducing Fiction to EssentialsThe Art of Sandwich MakingLast Chance: Subscribe to The Paris Review and Lucky PeachPoem: Jean Valentine, “Birthday Letter from South Carolina”Poem: Jean Valentine, “Birthday Letter from South Carolina”Want to Know True Beauty? Take a Look at a MothThe Joys of the Flea Market“Morning Street,” a poem by Carlos Drummond de AndradeWhat the World Needs Now Is More Geodesic DomesStaff Picks: James Turrell, Stuart Nadler, Alfred Stieglitz What 'The Crown' Season 4 gets wrong about the Troubles in Northern Ireland Nintendo Game & Watch: Super Mario Bros review: Handheld history Apple SVP Craig Federighi is a mood and also a ‘daddy’ Six Flags parks will wisely stop flying Confederate flags How to eat sustainably: Foods that damage our climate the most 'Bugsnax' review: Chaotic fun with a confusing center Apple's HomePod Mini is great, I just wish it had Google Assistant Netflix's 'Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House Of Fun' is a total Australian blast Elon Musk may have COVID 'Lego Star Wars Holiday Special' review: Don't call it a comeback Did Trump forget about his TikTok ban? TikTok would like to know. Dude on Tinder somehow uses memes to win his match's heart One simple tweak to California's car culture could help save the world 6 of history's greatest minds that I could easily defeat in Mario Kart 64 5 important details you may have missed from Apple's November event BMW unveils the iX, an electric SUV with a 300 Dude's definition of 'role play' is not exactly what his Tinder match had in mind Why hurricanes are retaining power when they hit land Space Karen is the burn Elon Musk deserves after his COVID Selena Gomez seriously has a twin and we can't tell who's who