CEMEX is massive.
https:// www.forbes.com/global/1998/0615/0106042a.html#1c0253763037
>Sophisticated may be an understatement. Consider the way Cemex does business at its three largest operations in Mexico and in Caracas, Venezuela. Three years ago Cemex would tell customers >it would try to make deliveries of ready-mix concrete (the kind that comes in the trucks with rotating barrels) within three hours of agreed delivery times. But no guarantees. If the traffic was bad or the >weather turned nasty, that was the customer's problem.
>Today Cemex promises deliveries within 20 minutes of the agreed time and backs up the promise with a 5% discount for any delivery that arrives late. Cemex can do this because its trucks are now >equipped with dashboard computer navigation terminals that allow tracking by a central dispatch unit using state-of-the-art global positioning satellite technology. With GPS, a central dispatcher in >each big city figures out which trucks are closest to the delivery site and sends them out on much shorter notice – constantly rerouting as customers cancel, delay or speed up their orders.
https://www.wired.com/2002/07/cemex/
>At the heart of Cemex's success is an IT system that manages production, personnel, and delivery in 33 countries. The business has reached $7 billion in annual revenue by selling its product in >places as far flung as Venezuela, Costa Rica, and Egypt, making it the third-largest – but most profitable – cement manufacturer in the world. Credit goes to the company's CEO and head geek >Lorenzo Zambrano. "We're early adopters of leading-edge technology," he says.
https://www.wired.com/1997/07/cemex-2/
>A data network that uses a combination of local and international carriers, plus Cemex's own satellite system, hooks up every plant and office, providing streams of real-time data on everything from >daily sales and output to truck oil change schedules. Technical flying squads get newly acquired subsidiaries online in only a few months. There's a private satellite TV network for in house training >and videoconferencing. A local call from virtually anywhere on the planet hooks traveling executives directly into the companywide international phone system.
These guys have been developing satellite and GPS technology since the 1980s. FOR FUCKING CEMENT. They own all their own trucks and own their own satellite system. This companies could well be the biggest human trafficking front in existence. I’d like to know if this satellite data can be captured, even if its “private”.