Electronic privacy is for the birds.

Source: Wikipedia
In a match between Bird-brain vs. broadband, you might be surprised to see who wins.
An old friend of mine pointed out what sounded like an interesting story out of South Africa. Tired of slow download speeds, a South African call center pitted a racing pigeon against Telkom South Africa Ltd.’s ADSL data service to see which could move a 4GB file faster. In total it took just under three hours for the bird to fly approximately 50 miles--about 30 times faster than the ADSL service, which had only downloaded 4% of the file in the same time.
I'm afraid we're not really comparing apapane to apapane, or even apapane to ostriches. I doubt, for instance, that the pigeon would fair quite as well over, say, a 500 or 5000 mile "data run".
The experiment, however, raises what is perhaps a more relevant conclusion: You probably couldn't find a more secure method for moving data than via carrier pigeon. While all Internet traffic is subject to both warranted, and illicit intercept and monitoring at multiple gateways, routers, interconnection points, and hosts, one would be hard pressed to serve a warrant on--or even physically intercept--a carrier pigeon. Not to mention, even if they occasionally drop a "packet", it's hard to argue with their wireless range.
It's certainly something to think about.
Thanks Ron!
More at:
Bloomberg (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601116&sid=aB5JSWQt0XYY)
News.com.au (http://www.news.com.au/technology/story/0,28348,26053119-5014239,00.html)
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