Covering posts from 0800 ET February 22 to 0800 ET February 23. Sources: 153 geospatial feeds.
Quiet day across the feeds — here are the highlights.
Six posts fell within the window, spanning a Sunday into a Monday morning. After filtering event promos and a personal life-update post, four items with substantive geospatial content remain.
1. Location Privacy: Update on Blurring of Images in Ground Photographs — Spatial Reserves Joseph Kerski returns to a thread he has been following since 2012 — the tension between rich location imagery and the privacy of individuals visible in it. This installment updates his analysis of how platforms handle face and license-plate blurring in ground-level photography, drawing on UAV imagery from a San Francisco tower as a recent case. The post is worth bookmarking as a teaching resource; Kerski consistently makes these policy and ethics topics accessible without flattening the complexity. → Read on Spatial Reserves
2. Cloud-Native Geospatial: Was es kann, was nicht — und wann man es wirklich braucht — digital.ebp.ch Swiss consultancy EBP Digital publishes what is described as an honest, conference-hype-free assessment of cloud-native geospatial: what the term actually covers, where its genuine strengths lie, and — crucially — where it does not yet deliver on its promises. Published in German, but the framing ("it's time to look more closely") is precisely the corrective tone the cloud-native conversation needs after years of LinkedIn boosterism. Worth running through a translator if German is not your first language. → Read on digital.ebp.ch
3. Earth Observation Weekly Briefing — February 23, 2026 — TerraWatch Space Newsletter The weekly EO market intelligence digest from Aravind Ravichandran landed on schedule. The full edition is behind TerraWatch's Pro paywall, so no detail is available from the feed, but the timing means it is likely the most comprehensive structured look at the week's EO deals, partnerships, and strategy moves for those with access. → Read on TerraWatch Space Newsletter
4. 2024 Per Capita Personal Income by County — Decision-Making Information Resources & Solutions ProximityOne applies the Bureau of Economic Analysis's freshly released personal income estimates to its Regional Economic Information System, surfacing county-level PCPI data for 2024. The lead finding — Teton County, Wyoming, at $532,903, up 78% since 2020 — is striking, and the post illustrates the kind of geographic economic profiling that spatial platforms routinely enable but rarely headline. Useful for anyone working at the intersection of geodemographics and policy. → Read on ProximityOne
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