Anonymous ID: 96f805 March 14, 2020, 12:25 a.m. No.8411247   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1358 >>1481 >>1550

>>8410757 last bread

post number, kek

bread number 10767, kek

 

Question? 8 of them, kek

 

Why does FlightAware show who the plane is registered to? You'd have to ask flight aware. But they are not the only source of that information. The US government provides it on the open net. So it must be legal to do so. Open source information.

https://registry.faa.gov/AircraftInquiry/NNum_Results.aspx?NNumbertxt=N162JC

 

Is it a site bug? No.

 

If so, how/why would they even have the ability to see the owner on the registration? FAA records, see link above.

 

ADS-B fuck up? Nope.

 

Sudden FAA action or rules change? Nope?

 

White hat assist? Unknown.

 

How/why are we able to see this data? It's called digging.

 

How long will we be able to see this data? Unknown.

 

So here is what is happening, essentially. The owners of aircraft who want privacy tell FlightAware not to show their flight data. And they don't. So you can't see their location, flight plan, or flight track. But that does not stop us from finding the airplane on ADS-B exchange if the world wide ADS-B network of receivers has picked up data from the aircraft's transmitter in the last 24 hours. A manual search, by tail number, will get a result from ADS-B Exchange if a record less than 24 hours old exists. And the tail number of the aircraft is displayed along with other data because the airplane's ADS-B transmitter is broadcasting it over the airwaves. Hope that helps.

Anonymous ID: 96f805 March 14, 2020, 1 a.m. No.8411343   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>8411287

Restoring Our Republic by Ned Ryun

POTUS tweeted this book is a must read last fall.

YT channels Juan Browne, AvE, ZIG ZAG Ground ZERO, and backtoconstittution (if he hadn't got pissed off and pulled all his content down)

Films White Squall and Official Secrets (both recommended by Q). It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World just for the TallMantz aviation stunts. Flew a twin Beech through a billboard and a hanger. The Man with the Golden Arm. Frank Sinatra film and Dr. Strangelove. Both feature someone thought permanently paralyzed getting up out of wheelchair and walking.