To emphasize on what Veik said I heard another report of China buying a tractor company here just as a mean to steal the technology behind. They werent even interested in reopening the local factories, they just grabbed all the blueprints and went to produce them at home.
Like the US airforce may be the only ones to have fully developed over the years full stealth oriented aircraft like the F-22, F-117, etc, and even if other countries already use stealth on their aircrafts, those aircrafts are not primarily designed for stealth, stealth is just a supplemental sugarcoat. They would have to actually invest a lot to develop their own tech to get on the same level.
But it's true not only for the military, but also for civilian high technologies, like nuclear plants of all sorts.
I try not to give the military too much credit, especially for forward thinking. You'd think the Predator was an incredible piece of equipment, but Iran managed to take over and land one by remotely dicking with its GPS settings.
The capsule is a different animal, since the separate components may not be wholly understood by anyone outside CONCORD, but the way information is relayed into the brain and the basic layout can't be. Not only do ship companies have to know how to interface their ships to the capsule, so they have to know how information flows back and forth, anyone can take a capsule apart if they have one. Since there are plenty of pirate capsuleers around who may not know exactly how a brain scanner works, but they may certainly know where the engine, power source, and data links are. All we know is that only CONCORD makes capsules (to my knowledge, anyway). That doesn't mean it's a complete bundle of mystery.
You may not know how to make a brain scanner from scratch parts, but it's certainly plausible that, after over a century of capsuleer flight, people might have figured out how to rudimentarily turn it off from outside the capsule. I don't know how to make a F-117 any more than the next guy nor do I have intricate details of its design, but if it was in a hanger with one and I had a toolbox and a blow torch, I think I could manage to make it into the cockpit or keep it from flying. The technology of airplanes might be pretty advanced, but the basics aren't really beyond grasp after a hundred years with common sense.
I think the hard part is more what Esna is pointing out, that it's probably much more difficult to extract a capsuleer from his capsule without the brain scanner deep-frying his brain automatically. It's meant to go off even if you can knock a capsuleer unconscious or somehow screw up his link to the machine. All it cares about is the health and integrity of the capsuleer and the ship. It's all autonomous and quick, from what I know.
You'd either have the possibility of the hard and fast approach, using something able to knock the scanner out before it could do its job, or the delicate way, where maybe you can slowly and carefully dismantle it and get around the safeties and protections to disconnect the power or otherwise sabotage it. I'm not sure which of those is more plausible, or even possible, but I can't see it being completely impossible to do barring no circumstances. It's been 120 years since the Caldari got the technology and it's been through a lot of development since then to get it to interface with cloning technology. I'm not sure whether it's really an impenetrable mystery as to how the bits and pieces work and go together.
Maybe it's just my source. Is "The Capsule and the Clone" on EVElopedia not official? Sometimes I have trouble figuring out what counts and what doesn't since it's all a little contradictory sometimes.
I guess when Predator drones are built by the lowest bidder[...]
Mm. A large part of the drone fleet still sends their video over the air unencrypted, and I'm given to understand that their control applications run on a Windows network that isn't a complete stranger to the occasional breach or virus infection..
It's the damndest thing. I went through the earlier part of my life thinking that the government was this uber-powerful organization that could be totally impenetrable if they wanted to. That every piece of software was custom-written, every document was encoded to an unimaginable degree, and that security was so cold that to break in would be a miracle.
Now I think government security is respectable, but I'm not sure its even a government that owns the most secure network in the world anymore. There are corporations out there that may be harder to penetrate.