The company offers to use the moon to make data backups
The firm Lonestar has already made two flights to the moon, this year and next, as the first step in setting up data storage centers on this satellite where they must be protected from the deteriorating Earth’s climate.
signature A lone star Has confirmed that it has already completed its next two missions to the lunar surface: its purpose is to test its viability. Use our moon as a data backup center. Send my files to the moon, 240,000 miles away, when I sometimes forget to make a backup copy of them on an external drive at home?
This is what Lonestar offers. Of course, we are not talking about backing up your vacation photos, which should be secure enough in any online storage service, but about critical data that needs to be stored for a long time and does not require daily access.
The company says its intention is to build a series Storage centers on the lunar surfaceSupply a $ 200,000 million global market that, if successful, would become the cosmos (or at least part of the Earth-Moon system).
“Data is the best currency ever created by mankind,” he said. Chris StottFounder of Lonestar. “We depend on them for almost everything we do, and they are very important to us as a species in storing the Earth in an increasingly fragile biosphere.”
ᲙCompany Last December, it already set up a computer center on the International Space StationAnd now a series of tests will begin on board the mission IM-1 by intuitive machinesWhich will travel to the Moon Oceanus Procellarum in late 2022 and on a mission IM-2Which will visit the South Pole of the Moon.
The first test will be software only to confirm the appropriateness of creating a trusted link for data transmission and reception Intuitive Machines Nova-C Module. The second mission, scheduled for 2023, will be carried out by A.J. Book size device with 16 terabytes Inside the repository with which they will do more data exchange tests.
The third step, later, will be Create real data storage centersWhich will be protected from sudden changes in temperature experienced by the moon throughout the day (from 106 to -183 degrees) and from electromagnetic radiation. They will be built in tunnels left by the flow of basalt lava On the lunar surface, according to Data Center Dynamics.
Both NASA and ESA (European Space Agency) have plans to send robots into these tunnels to see what they look like inside, though without specific dates. Meanwhile, NASA’s Artemis project is ready to set up a permanent base on the moon, which will have its own 4G connection service; The original date was 2022, the first manned voyage of the spacecraft Artemis began in 2024, but the U.S. Space Agency postponed them until 2026, hoping to test its SLS rocket loaded with Orion capsule and fuel in June or July. Next.
Using extreme locations to store data is not new (apart from objects in the Arctic, Microsoft has already shown the viability of data centers on the seabed), but being on the moon is a long way off. The most remote.
Source: La Nacion
John Cameron is a journalist at The Nation View specializing in world news and current events, particularly in international politics and diplomacy. With expertise in international relations, he covers a range of topics including conflicts, politics and economic trends.