Hail All!
Nice photo of it there mate, although I must admit that
the following photo made me take a little more notice...It would appear that the driver of this 47 has forgotton to couple his train to the loco and has set off completely unawares!
Anyhow...Last reported position of the box - As of 13:35 today - Is still near Glasgow...Although it's possible that the OHLE could be playing havoc with the GPS device (Or it's failed) so it could already be on it's way back south for all we know. 8)
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Incidentally, does anyone else think that this project from the BBC could reduce the security of the box's contents in several ways? Given that the project shows projected points of origin, destination, and what the box is carrying for that particular leg of it's journey - To say nothing of how easily identifiable the container itself actually is - I would've imagined that it would've been used for very low value cargo only, such as cheap toys, devices and base materials intended for manufacturing or processing!
Considering a current hypothetical scenario:
The box is currently full of Scotch Whisky, and I would estimate a container's worth of that to easily be worth a good £10,000+ in value. Now could ye imagine if a criminal gang saw that on the BBCi website, decided to get a gang and an HGV together, and stop or derail the train carrying the container back south with the intention of stealing it's load, and then managed to walk away with ten grands worth of Whisky? The liability for that would go to the BBC no doubt...And guess whose licence fees would go up to cover the costs?...

hock::roll:
Normally, the security of containers is in obscurity; Ye could crack-open a random container to find several million worth of Gold bullion inside (Though highly unlikely!) or just a load of scrap plastic being shipped to a recycling plant. The only register of a container's contents is normally the shipping manifest (And that's often as vague as possible) and such paperwork is always stored securely away from the container for a good reason...
In the case of this one container, the BBC project removes that security through obscurity...
Thoughts on this, anyone?
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