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Are You Guys Ready For Your National ID Cards


MagentaCandle

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I was talking about the ID cards. I don't want chip in me. Unless it will make me smarter.lol

lol

Actually you jumped in before me eric, that comment was to questionmark?

Anyway theres no point discussing the RFID imo, it's already upon us right here right now.

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Anyway theres no point discussing the RFID imo, it's already upon us right here right now.

Yes, it is found everywhere, but I can't see how to track humans with them. I can't even track my cats who are all implanted because else they cannot travel over borders anymore.

Your cellphone is a much better tracking device than any RFID chip.

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Yes, it is found everywhere, but I can't see how to track humans with them.

Googley Googley Google the info questionmark, you maybe surprised man. :tu:

I recommend 'Verichip' website...one of the major companies already supplying the world with 'satellite tracking' human micro chippies...

Later.

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Sounds like a friggin joke to me...

The ID card is here & now soon to be followed by the human microchip(just a question of when it becomes mandatory)

and they expect us to believe a 'safer more efficient' way forward, err ok... ^_^ ''I'm exited, i cant wait to get one'' :yes:

From what i can gather never has our identity 'ever' been more at risk.

This is just a few problems (nothing to be concerned about) in Britain alone...

ID cards:

News & Current Affairs (((London 07.10.07)))

this is london.co.uk

ID card fears as staff hack into Home Office database.

Office staff are hacking into the department's computers, putting at risk the privacy of 40million people in Britain.

''The revelation undermines Government claims that sensitive information being collected for its controversial ID Cards scheme could not fall into criminal hands.''

MPs and technology experts have expressed fears that the national register, which will store sensitive details of more than 40million people, will be a honeypot for hackers and identity thieves.

Human Microchip:

VeriChip's human-implatable RFID chips clonable & hackable

Verichip hacked press release

VERICHIP RFID IMPLANT HACKED!

In case anyone needed more proof that we're all living in a Philip K. Dick novel, a pair of hackers have recently demonstrated how human-implantable RFID chips from VeriChip can be easily cloned, effectively stealing the person's identity.

The VeriChip can be hacked! This revelation along with other worrisome details could put a crimp in VeriChip Corporation's planned initial public offering (IPO) of its common stock, say Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre.

"If you look at the VeriChip purely from the business angle, it's a ridiculously flawed product," says McIntyre. She notes that security researcher Jonathan Westhues has shown how easy it is to clone a VeriChip implanted in a person's arm and program a new chip with the same number.

They've barely issued them and hackers have already had a field day.

ROFL!

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I must be missing something...isn't this a good thing?

Dunno 'bout you, but I have a grueling time providing several forms of identification to prove my identity...Medicare card, bank card, birth certificate, passport, drivers license. I'd kill to have just ONE to hand over.

I mean c'mon, some people are reacting as though Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith are going door-to-door, forcibly bending folks over and shoving plate-sized and irregularly shaped tracking pods up their butts.

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Even if there was a RFID chip on a passport, an active (battery powered) one has a usable tracking distance of 15 feet. If that is the case just don't put in new batteries. A passive chip has a usable distance of less than 1 foot, small ones less than an inch. To track anybody they would have to put up a billion transceiver stations.

To get bigger distances a sizable antenna is needed that just is bigger than any passport I know.

There are things that can be tracked that are not battery powered, isotope patches and things like that. They invented it for passive surveylance, and i have no reason to doubt they perfected it in the last twenty years or so.

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There are things that can be tracked that are not battery powered, isotope patches and things like that. They invented it for passive surveylance, and i have no reason to doubt they perfected it in the last twenty years or so.

Then you still have the antenna problem. A usable radiator that has some reach is at least λ/4.

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