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Отв: Microchipping humans

Edward Teach4 min to read

[end of the art[/IMG]JaDHS border chRFTransportation Department will use RFID for road nannying.  With government funding [of course] and access to a large swath of radio spectrum, four RFID developers are starting work on a new generation of products aimed at bringing greater safety and new wireless applications to U.S. roads.  Any system of this type would require this technology to be built into new vehicles. The Editor says...
Let U.N.'s UnNew York to offer enhanced drFarRoad Tolls Hacked:  HackRFElectronRFHidden Healthcare Reform Objective:  Feds Want to Know Your Number.  Imagine, if you will, that you are living in a changed America, or in President Obama's words, an America that begged "re-making."  In this now-changed America, hope is in big government and her closest ally, big science.  Now imagine that you and your spouse give birth to a child in this brave, new America, in a hospital linked by law to the federal citizens database.  Immediately upon your child's birth, a hospital clerk assigns your newborn with a "Unique Health Identifier" (UHI), a specially coded number, which is then put into a national electronic database, along with your newborn's fingerprints and any other identifiers the bureaucrats in D.C. have demanded. ... Imagine that it is even required that your newborn, before leaving the hospital, be fitted with a surgically implanted microchip, the way babies are now, in many states, required to be vaccinated and blood-typed. The Editor says...
When people are DO NOT ACCEPT THE CalObaMan infects himself with computer virus.  University of Reading researcher Mark Gasson has become the first human known to be infected by a computer virus.  The virus, infecting a chip implanted in Gasson's hand, passed into a laboratory computer.  From there, the infection could have spread into other computer chips found in building access cards. Rebuttal:
Re: ScDPrivacy No More!  You may think this is crazy, but the Green Police are coming to a town near you!  I am serious!  Many think the [advertisement] put out by Audi during the 2010 Superbowl is funny and cannot happen here in the United States — think again; it is happening now!  Seriously, your garbage and recyclables are being monitored (in some cities in the USA) via RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) either put on your garbage containers/recycling bins or on your garbage bags.  Plus, there are people who are called "Green Police" or the "Eco Police" that can then give you a fine of $25-$100 for not recycling or not recycling correctly.  In other countries in Europe you can go to court if you do not recycle correctly or not enough — these RFID can even weigh how much garbage is being picked up at each address and then it is used to see if each address is doing enough to recycle. The Editor says...
The RFI'll never be accused of recycling too little.
Source: RFID -- Radio Frequency Identification Technology and Its Impact on Privacy

вторник, 13 декабря 2016 15:39 Edward Teach <edwardtgao8@... писал(а):

[the end of the article]
RFVerUpdate:
HuVerChRFKodak's RFW.Va. Coal ElectronRFRFWUK consConsuWal-Water vendRetaRF'Hardcore' crPrOld BRFOrwell Today  coBrThe hands-free way to steal a credRFRFCracked Doubts raUK BYou need not be paranoChBrRFRFDoes HoE-Passports Less RelUK RFThe RFOrwellBoycott DepartTaWal-Wal-SpychAlbertsons' assets sold to CVS, Supervalue and Oakland RequChCalPfStorHere Co"ThThe ReRF[REALLY?]  HEncrypt E-Passports.  The State DepartRollout of Chip-Embedded Passports Begins:  The State Department decided to ignore the overwhelming public opposition to the use of passports containing radio frequency identification (RFID) chips.  The first e-passports are being distributed and the nationwide rollout will occur at the end of the year. … The new passports and the chip technology pose a serious threat to privacy and security.  There remains the possibility that personal information could be "skimmed" or stolen from a distance using a chip reader. … The chips could also act as beacons that broadcast trav

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[the end of the article]
RFVerUpdate:
HuVerChRFKodak's RFW.Va. Coal ElectronRFRFWUK consConsuWal-Water vendRetaRF'Hardcore' crPrOld BRFOrwell Today  coBrThe hands-free way to steal a credRFRFCracked Doubts raUK BYou need not be paranoChBrRFRFDoes HoE-Passports Less RelUK RFThe RFOrwellBoycott DepartTaWal-Wal-SpychAlbertsons' assets sold to CVS, Supervalue and Oakland RequChCalPfStorHere Co"ThThe ReRF[REALLY?]  HEncrypt E-Passports.  The State DepartRollout of ChNew UK bThe CoalMasterCard to begin national rollout of swipeless RFID cards.  After months of testing, MasterCard is preparing for a major national rollout of its PayPass swipeless RFID credit cards, and expects to have up to 4 million of them in circulation by the end of the year. … MasterCard and its rivals insist that the new cards are as safe as traditional credit cards, and often point to the success of ExxonMobil's SpeedPass system as proof. The Editor says...
SpeedPass?  RFChRFWhat Auto-RFRFRSA Keeps RFRFRFRFBHoWhere's RFReturn To Sender:  RFPSecurity Flaws Revealed in RFID Enabled Products.  Students at Johns Hopkins University have discovered serious security flaws in the RFID chips which are used to protect cars from theft and prevent fraudulent use of Speedpass keys.  The research shows that even RFID systems considered to be secure remain vulnerable, which only highlights the need to prioritize anaylsis of privacy and security prior to implementation of RFID technology.  The potential for exploitation of the security deficiencies serves as a warning to all industries and governments that would hastily assemble RFID enabled systems in order to identify and/or track people as they cross borders.
SynopsEPSpy Chips dot com.

<b Students ordered to wear tracking tags.  The only grade school in this rural town is requiring students to wear radio frequency identification badges that can track their every move.  Some parents are outraged, fearing it will rob their children of privacy.

EleHow RFAre new passports an "TaNew York Times.  "The information is fed automatically by wireless phone to the police and school administrators."  Police can monitor children from the time they leave home to their arrival on campus. The Editor says...
Passports RFhACLU UrProposed "Enhanced" LThe Proposed Nat"HoRFRFJamming Tags Block RFID Scanners

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