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Space United States

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin Sues NASA, Escalating Its Fight for a Moon Lander Contract (theverge.com) 117

Jeff Bezos' space company Blue Origin brought its fight against NASA's Moon program to federal court on Monday, doubling down on accusations that the agency wrongly evaluated its lunar lander proposal. From a report: The complaint escalates a monthslong crusade by the company to win a chunk of lunar lander funds that was only given to its rival, Elon Musk's SpaceX and comes weeks after Blue Origin's first protest over the Moon program was squashed by a federal watchdog agency. Now in court, Blue Origin's challenge could add another pause to SpaceX's contract and a new lengthy delay to NASA's race to land astronauts on the Moon by 2024.

Blue Origin's complaint, filed with the US Court of Federal Claims, was shrouded behind a protective order. The company is broadly challenging NASA's decision to pick SpaceX for the lunar lander award, and "more specifically ... challenges NASA's unlawful and improper evaluation of proposals submitted under the HLS Option A BAA," according to its request to file its complaint under seal. Blue Origin was one of three firms vying for a contract to land NASA's first astronauts on the Moon since 1972. In April, NASA shelved the company's $5.9 billion proposal of its Blue Moon landing system and went with SpaceX's $2.9 billion Starship proposal instead, opting to pick just one company for the project after saying it might pick two. Limited funding from Congress only allowed one contract, NASA has argued.

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Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin Sues NASA, Escalating Its Fight for a Moon Lander Contract

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  • What're the grounds? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @11:47AM (#61697617)

    SpaceX has done impressive shit. Blue Origin hasn't done anything. What grounds are they contesting it on?

    • Bezos has plenty of money, if he had balls he'd pay for this himself and be standing on the moon the greet SpaceX when they arrived.

      • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:00PM (#61697711)
        To spite him, NASA should award a second contract to Dynetics and say it fulfilled its two supplier requirement.
        • If Dynetics is cheaper, they absolutely should do this.

          • Really, they should do it anyway, Blue Origin's ship has the least long-term value of the three, while Dynetics could actually serve a complementary role to Starship.

            Dynetics is developing a versatile, reusable lunar expedition platform with impressive sub-orbital potential in addition to surface-to-orbit capacity. Even after we've got a moon base with Starship-capable landing pads, Dynetics would still be an excellent way to send research, survey, and prospecting teams on suborbital flights to distant sit

            • Sure, internally they could argue the merits. But it is way more fun to spite him and watch him fume with a Jeremy Clarkson like *smugface* :->
              • I just love this video [twitter.com] of Bezos lamenting the slowness of the current procurement process, compared to the times of the Apollo program.

                "They were moving fast (...) there were nine comptitors for the lunar lander (...) and it was awarded to Grumman six months later. Today there would be, you know, tree protests, and the losers would sue the federal government, because they didn't win,..."

      • divorce.
        mrs bezos got his balls in the settlement

      • divorce.
        mrs bezos got Jeffâ(TM)s balls in the settlment

    • One proposed solution to all this is to pay the companies after the fact.

      Set up some verifiable target conditions, and pay the money to the first company that achieves them.

      If that's too far in the future, you could set target conditions for specific milestones. In this case: first to launch a satellite to low orbit, first to launch to geosynchronous (or farther) orbit, first to hit the moon, first to land on the moon, first to land on the moon and come back...

      Break the contract into sections and award the

      • by CWCheese ( 729272 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:51PM (#61697899)
        In the most basic sense, your solution is pretty much how SpaceX got to its current position as a commercial space launch company, Elon Musk pushed hard - sometimes recklessly hard - to perfect launch and recovery using mostly his own dimes. By doing so, he was able to convince NASA & USAF to trust SpaceX as a service provider. Blue Origin has thus far not proven convincingly that it has the wherewithal to provide space launch services on a routine basis.

        Surely, Jeff Bezos can crow about how his New Glenn technically beat Falcon to a landing back on earth surface from space, but Falcon and Falcon9 and Falcon Heavy have gone forward to actually deliver revenue producing payloads to orbit, and cargo & crew delivery to ISS on a regular schedule. This has freed NASA from reliance on Russian Space Agency for rideshare service on Soyuz. Where is BO? Finally last month sending the boss into LEO for 2 minutes.

        Yes, Bezos has made a deal with ULA to buy BE-4 rocket motors for their next launch vehicle, but that is still vaporware and has yet to deliver anything even a foot above the ground. So neither BO nor ULA have convinced anyone that the new tech is trustworthy to provide orbital delivery service.

        You're correct, make the contracts contingent on companies achieving targets and award then. If Bezos has the cash to casually toss $2B like I toss pennies, then he ought to spend that to launch a dozen flights carrying commercial payloads to LEO and GEO to show NASA and USAF/USSF it can deliver.
        • by AJWM ( 19027 )

          > Surely, Jeff Bezos can crow about how his New Glenn technically beat Falcon to a landing back on earth surface from space,

          New Shepard. New Glenn doesn't exist yet.

          And barely from space, not from near-orbital velocity like Falcon.

          • Thanks for the correction, I was typing fast and mixed up the vehicles. That said, it was many years since New Shepard made that flight until it carried crew, while SpaceX has been launching dozens of payloads and several crew missions in that same space of time.
        • by bev_tech_rob ( 313485 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @01:34PM (#61698027)

          Where is BO? Finally last month sending the boss into LEO for 2 minutes.

          Correct me if I am wrong, but BO hasn't even launched an ORBITAL vehicle yet, have they? All they have done is gone straight up and straight down. SpaceX has been there, done that already and got the T-shirt.

          That is child's play compared to fielding an orbital vehicle,

          • As Khrushchev said comparing Gagarin's flight to Shepard's, "Around the world precisely, not just up and down."

        • Surely, Jeff Bezos can crow about how his New Glenn technically beat Falcon to a landing back on earth surface from space.

          Actually, New Glenn has not flown as is still a paper rocket at this point. You mean New Shepard.

          Finally last month sending the boss into LEO for 2 minutes.

          LEO stands for Low Earth Orbit, all they did is go straight up and back down again which is peanuts compared to actually reach any orbit.

          • True. They never did an orbit of the earth, just touched the lowest edge of orbital space for 2 minutes and came back down.
        • It's hard to see how Blue Origin has a leg to stand on here relative to SpaceX. SpaceX was founded at about the same time as Blue Origin (actually 2 years later), but has achieved many more milestones and demonstrated far more capability than Blue Origin since then. They're simply further along, and are routinely doing things that Blue Origin has yet to do even once (like go to LEO and actually orbit).

          It appears on the surface like Blue Origin's approach will be less complex, but if that's true then why is

    • Bezos is a sore loser who would rather whine because the lost than see anyone succeed.

    • Well it's sealed right now so nobody knows exactly what the grounds are.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by im_thatoneguy ( 819432 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @01:43PM (#61698059)

      Yeah:

      Option A) Land 2 people on the moon for a couple days, plant some flags, collect a couple rocks. Fly home. Burn blueprints when done as solution is exclusively for fulfilling NASA's lunar lander mission. $6B.

      Project has no alternative customers. If it runs over budget NASA would need to depend on the goodwill of the client to keep shoveling money into it and not cut their losses or be bailed out from bankruptcy.

      Option B) Land 20 people on the moon and an entire instant lunar base. Also the option to use the same architecture to replace the ISS, replace the SLS, affordably replace the HLS' lunar gateway station, put astronauts on Mars, slash launch expenses on every single other NASA project by a factor of 10, land a large permanent lunar base, build an orbital refueling depot for deep space missions and dramatically reduce the time to reach the outer solar system with the opportunity to build massive kick stages to boost probes' delta V. $3B

      Project has a long line of commercial customers who contractor must appease besides NASA and cannot afford to fail.

      Hmmm, I wonder which one NASA should pick?

      • Pretty much.

        Though keep in mind, the Lunar Starship is a separate beast from the "general purpose" Starship. Starship, its orbital refueling functionality, outer-system potential, etc. will almost certainly come to pass regardless of NASA's contribution (assuming no HUGE problems)

        The NASA Lunar Starship design is primarily focussed on the modifications specifically necessary for the moon - mostly those alternate high-mounted engines that will hopefully let it land without the Raptor engines launching debri

    • Entitlement, basically.

      Bezos believes he's entitled to this contract since he's one of the richest men alive and can buy any and all members of Congress.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      SpaceX has done impressive shit. Blue Origin hasn't done anything. What grounds are they contesting it on?

      Easy. They got the DoD to cancel Microsoft's contract because that was meant for them. They won the NSA contract.

      Thus, they should win NASA contract as well.

  • Sounds a bit like someone stepped on his 3rd big toe.

    Come on Bezos, count your blessings. Just look at Boeing. You're still in the race and we love it.

    • by xonen ( 774419 )

      To add to that. Just make a private financed moon landing then. Sure you can.

      Wait, think saw a gimmick i have to order soon. Can't finish this post really; have to sponsor Space Race first. Please, go. Do it.

      • To add to that. Just make a private financed moon landing then. Sure you can.

        Wait, think saw a gimmick i have to order soon. Can't finish this post really; have to sponsor Space Race first. Please, go. Do it.

        I think the proper order is to get into orbit first, then figure out how to get to the moon...

        • by xonen ( 774419 )

          I think the proper order is to get into orbit first, then figure out how to get to the moon...

          Quite sure you can hire orbital launchers just from any, like Russia or SpaceX. A landing, on the other hand, takes some. Same profession, different expertises.

  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @11:51AM (#61697643)
    When did it become mainstream for companies to start dictating government contracts and taking the government to court over its choice of contractors? As if we already don't have enough dysfunction in our government with inaction, now we have to wait for Bozos, er, Bezos, to finish litigation before things can move forward?
    • by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:00PM (#61697709) Journal

      Seems basically Amazon vs...the world. Space, cloud, something else.

      • We'll know that Amazon is in control on the day that a Prime van rolls up to the white house to deliver a single roll of toilet paper.

    • It became a thing when those contracts and their administration became subject to applicable law.
      • Contracts have always been subject to applicable law. Contracts only exist because of the framework of law.

        What's imbecilic is the vendor allowing wording in their contract which would allow a plausible legal challenge from the loser. That's known as NASA management lowballing their legal department.

        The problem is that its cheaper for Bezos to present a legal challenge than it is for him to "lose" the contract. Because NASA is a gov't agency, there won't be enough institutional memory to hold a grudge th

        • The problem is that its cheaper for Bezos to present a legal challenge than it is for him to "lose" the contract. Because NASA is a gov't agency, there won't be enough institutional memory to hold a grudge the next time NASA opens bidding for a space contract.

          If Blue Origin is passed over next time due to a grudge, they will sue and win. If they broke existing law, they need to be sanctioned in a way that disallows them from competing in subsequent RFPs. If they are merely acting in bad faith, there needs to be new legislation to prevent such bad faith obstructionism. As much as it pains me to say it, if there is merit to their suit, then it should move forward.

          • by hawk ( 1151 )

            I haven't fully thought it through, but I'm toying with the notion of imposing liability for delays in projects caused by unsuccessful challenges to contract awards . . . the question is in what way to quantify the cost of the delay of the project not starting, or at least coming up with some kind of proxy for that.

            Another possibility would be to alter the court rules for such challenges to have an *extremely* short period before a preliminary injunction type hearing (i.e., ten days or so) and no stay on th

    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:17PM (#61697777)

      1770's?

      in 1773 The Boston Tea Party was about partly the fact that East India Company was granted a monopoly to sell tea to the Americas, where many of the Americans were going via different sources to get their Tea before, some where some of the wealthier Americans had some investments in.

      It is actually common for companies to protest not getting a contract, especially if they feel they offered a better deal. However the rise of Ultra Mega Rich and Highly Charismatic CEO like that of Amazon, Space X, Facebook, Microsoft and their other companies, tend to get their own egos brought into the debate more than what use to just be a bunch of lawyers, dictating a bunch of small points.

      What happens nearly all the time, but never makes the news, is when a small lesser known company sues to get a contract, because they went with a bigger company who will charge them more for the work, and also may not be specialized in the area they need to do. But the only criteria that made them choose the other company was how well their name was known.

      • by saider ( 177166 )

        I'm not sure I'd characterize Bezos as "Highly Charismatic"

        • Well he tries to be. Often Charismatic people are not as Likable as they often think they are, but are usually good at getting a good group of followers behind them.

          I wouldn't say Musk is Charismatic either, but he is able to get a bunch of fans of him too.

    • Indeed! Apollo project contractors didn't bicker like this, at least not publicly. They worked it out behind closed doors in a give and take way. Otherwise, the Eagle wouldn't have landed until the 80's. Maybe fear of Soviets made them cooperate? If we keep delaying in court, China will launch the next Sputnik and embarrass our ass again.

      • The good news is that SpaceX doesn't give a shit what bickering NASA and Blue Origin do on the sidelines. They're building Starship and Falcon Super-heavy regardless.

    • NASA will only have to wait for the litigation to complete if the judge issues a preliminary injunction requiring it. Given how cut and dry the GAO's decision against BO is, I find that highly unlikely.

      • Indeed (Score:4, Informative)

        by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @03:17PM (#61698371) Homepage Journal

        Indeed. When I assess a contract, I generally look at cost, level of service in the contract, and reliability of the company.

        Bezos is apparently protesting that Nasa is putting all its eggs in one basket and should have selected two companies. To me, this immediately fails, because Congress only funded one attempt. Basically, Nasa doesn't have enough money to select two bidders to compete.

        Next, cost. Space-X bid half that of BO. SpaceX wins.
        Level of service: SpaceX's proposal is better than BO's. They're promising more.
        Reliability: As many here have noted, SpaceX has actually put rockets into orbit, BO hasn't. Ergo, SpaceX wins.

        Short of some truly epit bullshit, SpaceX wins at all points.

    • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

      > When did it become mainstream for companies to start dictating government contracts and taking the government to court over its choice of contractors?

      Didn't they set a bad precedent when he sued Government/Microsoft for hosting Cloud over AWS?

    • by jbengt ( 874751 )
      When did it become mainstream for companies to start dictating government contracts and taking the government to court over its choice of contractors?

      Pretty sure it's been that way all along, at least since companies have been allowed to sue the government. (Suing kings wasn't really allowed.)

      Private enterprises can, and usually do, put clauses in the bidding documents like: We can award this to anyone we want whether you think it's fair or not. (paraphrasing)

      Governments are generally required by law

    • No worries, the moon is not running away!

  • happening during the first moon landing....
    we'd still be in court, instead of on the moon.

    C'mon Bozos, accept you lost with grace, and move on.
    You insecure prick.

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      From FPI, dateline July 20 1969:

      *** BREAKING NEWS ***

      FPI has just learned that a temporary restraining order has just issued preventing separation of the lunar module from the Apollo orbital capsule.

      Currently, two astronauts are in the LEM, and were minutes from leaving orbit for a landing.

      FPI investigations show that a failed contractor filed suit, disputing the awarding of key systems in the LEM, claiming that for merely three times the price it could have developed a similar system, and that it will irre

  • This guy talking to some TV anchor [twitter.com] was quite dismissive of losers suing the federal government. May be we should arrange for Jeff to meet this guy.
  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @11:57AM (#61697689) Homepage
    Company should be banned from any future bids as they can't play nice.
  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:00PM (#61697715)

    I have the same record of getting rockets into orbit as blue origin, so why not?

  • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:03PM (#61697731)

    https://twitter.com/SciGuySpac... [twitter.com]

    So why is Blue Origin doing this? Three theories I've heard:

      CEO Bob Smith has been told he is fired unless he wins an HLS contract
      Jeff Bezos is employing a "Burn the Ships" strategy
      Bezos is counting on Congress to bail him out

    Also says "Have spoken with two Blue Origin employees today. They are mortified by the recent "infographic spam" that has come from the company regarding NASA, SpaceX, and HLS. Opinion was mixed earlier, but now internally it is turning very much against the scorched Earth approach."

    I have to imagine that the engineers in the trenches at BO probably would not feel great about this approach versus just giving them the means to actually build hardware.

    He also floated the probably true rumor that Bezos is taking a page from SpaceX who I believe sued the USAF back in like 2005 in a similar situation where a sole contract was awarded to Kestrel for a rocket and they won thus getting some early money before even Falcon 1 was built. That is to say, it can be a winning strategy. The difference is the space market is wildly different than it was over a decade ago and NASA only has so much money before Congress steps in.

  • by guardiangod ( 880192 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:16PM (#61697771)

    https://www.businessinsider.com/how-spacex-beat-blue-origin-for-nasa-lunar-lander-project-2021-8 [businessinsider.com]

    In response, the GAO pointed to NASA's limited funds for the mission. The group even took a stab at Blue Origin, saying NASA was not "required" to choose an applicant whose proposal NASA did not find attractive. In other words, NASA was not forced to take on two companies if it only found one company up to par.

    Despite Bezos' offer to lower Blue Origin's $5.9 billion contract and take on $2 billion out-of-pocket, the GAO said NASA had found it "implausible" that the company could reduce its price without significantly changing its design.

    Bezos said NASA had unfairly evaluated Blue Origin. For example, the company argued that it was not specified that the vehicle should be able to land in the dark. The GAO contended that NASA was not required to lay out all minute details, and Blue Origin should take into account the conditions on the moon or space itself â" which is dark.

    Blue Origin also raised issue with the fact that SpaceX received extra points for developing a system that focused on the health and safety of the crew â" an objective that NASA had not made a requirement. The GAO said NASA had the freedom to choose which design function to prioritize.

    • by vakuona ( 788200 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:22PM (#61697789)

      The one o really like was this one:

      Blue Origin also raised issue with the fact that SpaceX received extra points for developing a system that focused on the health and safety of the crew â" an objective that NASA had not made a requirement. The GAO said NASA had the freedom to choose which design function to prioritize.

      • The fascinating thing about this is that SpaceX still managed to charge less (by several billion) than Blue Origin did....
    • For example, the company argued that it was not specified that the vehicle should be able to land in the dark. The GAO contended that NASA was not required to lay out all minute details, and Blue Origin should take into account the conditions on the moon or space itself, which is dark.

      That has to be one of the more absurd contentions I've heard in awhile from a big boy company. Last time I checked it does get a bit dark out there...

      • In their defense, half the moon is (almost) always illuminated, so it's not unreasonable to say "we're going to design our system to land on that half".

        However, if a second company says "we'll land anywhere, whether it's well lit or not", that's clearly demonstrating more capability than the first company.

        At the very least if I'm a NASA reviewer and considering the potential for problems during landing, I'd preferred the lander that can land regardless of light level. What if there's a problem and they nee

    • FWIW link to original GAO response.. sadly severely lacking in snark.
      https://www.gao.gov/assets/b-4... [gao.gov]

      Ouch... was that the moon?

      Specifically, the protester contends that the Option A BAA did not specifically require offerorsâ(TM) HLS vehicles to be able to land in darkness or low light conditions. Agencies, however, are generally not required to identify all areas of each factor that might be taken into account in an evaluation, provided the unidentified areas are reasonably related to, or encompassed by, the established factors.

      Blue Hindenburg v Space Farts...

      Blue Origin makes no effort to explain why the specific concerns arising from its need to mature technologies associated with its proposed use of LH2/LO2 are equally applicable to or otherwise reasonably comparable to the necessary development associated with SpaceXâ(TM)s proposed use of methane propellant. Cf. id. (explaining that "thermal risks for propellant transfer and storage are reduced through the use of liquid oxygen and methane, which can be stored at a significantly higher temperature and greater bulk density than liquid hydrogen").

      No I can't here you now...

      With respect to SpaceX, the contracting officer noted that SpaceXâ(TM)s
      proposal specifically addressed multipath degradation, both in terms of accounting (or "budgeting") for potential degradation in its calculations and design, and proposing specific mitigation approaches.

      Therefore, while SpaceX's approach created a risk to successful performance, the risk did not rise to a level warranting the assessment of a significant weakness. Supp. COS (B-419783) at 31. In contrast, the contracting officer noted that Blue Origin essentially deferred addressing multipath degradation in its proposal.22 Specifically, the contracting officer pointed to Blue Origin's link budget which accounted for 0 dB of multipath loss.

      Two clocks never gets old...

      The protester, however, pointed out a "notable difference" between the Orion's and its proposed HLS's architecture, namely that Orion uses a 3-IMU architecture while the HLS will use a [DELETED] architecture. Id. To address potential dilemma situations arising with [DELETED], Blue Origin proposed to utilize [DELETED] to [DELETED]. Id. at 24167. Blue Origin's proposal represented that "these [DELETED] . . . will be developed and fly on Orion before being leveraged for HLS."

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      The whole thing *did* become funnier when I read the list of complaints . . .

      Gosh, spaceX hasn't landed a Starship from orbit yet. I'm not sure I have enough fingers to count the ways in which that backfires . . . .

      And, oh, dear, they *added* features, including [*shudder*] safety that weren't in the specs, all for lower price.

      And how were we supposed to know it's dark in space?

      hawk

    • by vix86 ( 592763 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @02:59PM (#61698313)

      Bezos said NASA had unfairly evaluated Blue Origin. For example, the company argued that it was not specified that the vehicle should be able to land in the dark. The GAO contended that NASA was not required to lay out all minute details, and Blue Origin should take into account the conditions on the moon or space itself -- which is dark.

      I could not believe this was real so I actually went and looked at the GAO decision doc it self....and it is.

      From the decision doc:

      [P]ursuant to NASA’s requirements, the offeror’s planned mission will require landing in either darkness or low light conditions. As such, the offeror’s proposed TRN will not likely be able to provide the precision necessary to achieve an accurate landing in such conditions in accordance with NASA’s requirements. And, as a result, the offeror’s potential mission trajectories will be limited to those than can achieve a landing in areas with lighting conditions that are sufficient for the offeror to be able to utilize its TRN. This will in turn constrain the offeror’s landing sites and dates.

      Oh and here is the safety bit:

      For example, Blue Origin complains that NASA impermissibly relied on an unstated evaluation factor when it assigned SpaceX a strength for its “crew-centric” design that focuses on crew safety, health, and comfort. Specifically, the evaluators credited SpaceX’s design, noting several features including:

      * Spacious crew accommodations that [DELETED];
      * A [DELETED] configuration for [DELETED] of the mission, which will provide additional protection from [DELETED] by the crew;
      * [DELETED] with dedicated [DELETED], which will enable the crew to [DELETED] and [DELETED] the vehicle while providing needed redundancy and crew resource management during high-workload landing tasks;
      * A robust medical system including additional capabilities such as [DELETED]; and
      * “[E]xceptionally detailed and mature” [DELETED], which “will greatly improve the operability and safety of the final Starship design.”

      We think this representative example is exactly why discretion is due when NASA is seeking innovative research and development approaches to fulfilling important scientific and engineering objectives. In this regard, we find nothing unreasonable in NASA positively assessing SpaceX’s commitment to the health, safety, and comfort of the astronauts who will be traveling and working within the awardee’s HLS vehicle within the broader framework of the Option A BAA’s evaluation criteria and the Option A BAA’s request for innovative research and development solutions. Blue Origin’s disagreement that such considerations were not expressly contemplated by the solicitation or otherwise were inappropriate, without more, provides no basis to object to NASA’s evaluation.

      Full Decision doc can be found here [gao.gov]

  • Not only does he have to contend with a SUPERIOR company like SX, but now, he is making NASA an enemy.
    NASA would very much like to have BO doing stuff for them, BUT, NASA does NOT NEED BO.
    That is what is going to kill BO before they are really started.
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:27PM (#61697815)
    ... when you involve private companies with huge-ego CEOs.
  • by ickleberry ( 864871 ) <web@pineapple.vg> on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:35PM (#61697845) Homepage
    The man who sued his way to the moon
  • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:36PM (#61697857) Homepage
    Blue Origin hasn't successfully launched a ship into LEO, but feels they deserve a moon lander contract. I feel like I deserve a moon lander contract(aka free money from the government), especially since I pay taxes and Jeff Bezos does not.
  • predicting that Musk will simply ignore Bozo's court actions and will continue to work on his Starship with his own money. His primary objective is, after all, Mars, not the Moon.

    Bozo, who hasn't even put anything into orbit or carried people to the ISS, deludes himself into believing he can land on the Moon cheaper than Musk by using a copy of the ancient Lunar Lander. All he has done is repeat the same suborbital flight 15 times with no one aboard, and once with him and his friends. Not much preparat

    • Given the speed of litigation, SpaceX could very well have already done a lunar flyby in the Starship (scheduled for 3 years from now) before the case concludes. Given its current track record, Blue Origin will likely still be putzing around with suborbital flights.

    • Give the man some credit - he has now personally achieved the same milestones as a monkey and dog in the 1950s.

    • Actually, one nitpick correction - Bezos doesn't believe that he can land on the moon cheaper. His bid was double that of SpaceX.

      Technically, he wants to "share" with SpaceX, technically the same sort of solution as the ISS docking vessels. SpaceX and Boeing won on that, with Boeing charging substantially more and having substantially more problems, but theoretically would have meant that NASA would still have an ISS docking solution even if SpaceX shit the brick. In this case though, it's Boeing that ha

  • Never a good move.

  • To some extent this looks similar to what happened with Amazon fighting Microsoft about the JEDI contract. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Enterprise_Defense_Infrastructure [wikipedia.org]. That was a massive government contract for cloud computing that went to Microsoft. Amazon sued over it, and kept throwing in so many legal issues that eventually the government just gave up, canceled the whole program, and issued a new program which was essentially guaranteed to have some parts for Amazon, some for Microsoft and so

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      I doubt it will delay NASA's goals because SpaceX are developing Starship with or without the contract with NASA. All NASA is getting is a modified Starship that can land on the moon, which is why SpaceX is so much cheaper. However at this point in time SpaceX are no where near working on a modified Starship. You don't start working on a modified Starship till you have a fully functional one in the first place which SpaceX don't yet have. Hence no delay. Besides Musk would probably just keep working on it

  • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Monday August 16, 2021 @12:51PM (#61697901) Journal
    If it was bigger it would get the job done, but as it is it can barely penetrate space.
  • That Spacex is much more advanced and cooler than blue origin, and blue origin wont survive without some money headed it's way.

  • They just want their competition NOT to get the contract. This is the same as when Amazon sued the government's decision to use Microsoft for a data center. If they can tie it up in court long enough then the project can't go forward and eventually the government's needs will change and a new round of bids will be received, giving them a second chance.
  • These companies and the people in them don't seem to mind using the services we taxpayers paid for in the court system and NASA.

    Pay your share and stop being a parasite.

  • you little troll and prove you can actually do something productive in space. At least orbit the fucking planet you are helping to destroy for Christ's sake.
  • I wouldn't grant them anything, just on the hype of their announcer tries to pull off on every B.O. launch. OMG this is just the bestest, neatest thing ever. OMG you did it. You are *SO* amazing. Yeah no. Amazing would actually doing something, like launching an orbital rocket or a satellite over the past 10 years, rather than launching a high pressure water rocket. Also, why doesn't he just drop some cash himself, and prove it. Hey, look at me, I'm on the moon. My rocket is $2bil if you're intere
  • I will definitely devote more of my time to my vaporware rocket company that Bezos has to his company that has vaporware rockets. Maybe I should get a moon landing contract. Also, I promise not to let any "Alive Girls" distract me.

The fancy is indeed no other than a mode of memory emancipated from the order of space and time. -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge

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