Nuclear reactor sites no longer readily findable on Web
I was checking some of my URLs for maps of nuclear power plants, maps once heavily publicized as parts of civil defense preparedness plans from the U.S.G. Guess what? Many of them are gone. The Web caches are not fully useful, as the indexed sites point to the subpages containing the large image GIFs (and other formats). So Google's cache has the first page, but all attempts to access the subpages give the same "information no longer available" sorts of messages. The main Nuclear Regulatory Commission site no longer allows downloading of maps, and results in this message: http://www.nrc.gov/NRC/REACTOR/GEOSPATIAL/lvsites.html Nuclear Site Locations This site is no longer available. For another example, http://www.insc.anl.gov/pwrmaps/map/world_map.html "Unsuccessful Access to INSC Information ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The page you requested cannot be found on this server. Please check your URL for spelling errors. If you requested access to the maps of nuclear power reactor locations, these maps have been taken off-line temporarily pending the outcome of a policy review by the US Department of Energy and Argonne National Laboratory. " Maybe this is a temporary thing, maybe some lower-down burrowcrat thought to himself: "Oooh, I could lose my job for having a map of nuclear power plants at my site! Fortunately, the U.S.G. has no monopoly on simple maps of where nuclear power plants are! http://www.nucleartourist.com/ still works. I wonder for how long? How long before printing something so simple as a map, a map which has been around for decades, is considered espionage? As Nietzsche once said, be careful how you choose your enemies, for you will become them. --Tim May
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Tim May