Popular Science makes pitch for "Mark of the Beast"

Microsoft proposes tattooing patients. PopSci appears to like the idea. — MB

Photo: Yuichiro C. Katsumoto/Flickr CC

You might take this PopSci bit about an “invisible,” ultraviolet tattoo ID system, for another inconsequential workup of an industry press release.

But what bothers me about this webby, is that it uncritically pushes the RFID industry’s latest, dubious storyline: that the only way to be “truly safe” (from phantom villains, hacking into pacemakers) is with “permanent,” implanted devices and IDs.

This graf, for example, exemplifies the imprecise prose George Orwell describes, in Politics and the English Language. Rather than encouraging critical thinking, it conceals and prevents it:

“More and more implantable devices, like pacemakers or defibrillators, are turning to wireless signals as a means to communicate with external devices, but in doing so they open themselves to security breaches. Several solutions are in the works that tackle this problem by upping device defenses, but by piling on security measures, yet another risk emerges: that at a critical time an authorized physician might not be able to access the device.”

The graf — as does the rest of the piece — tosses up unspecified threats, against which it proposes tattooing patients (i.e., everyone). In all that vagueness, the vulnerabilities posed by implanted devices become infinitely vast and dark.

Without those threats, the RFID industry will have a tough time tattooing serial numbers on people for whom the tagging, tracking, and tracing of humans remains a bitter, and fresh, memory, and Christian end-timers, for whom the Mark of the Beast is a very real fear.

via Tattooing Patients With UV Ink Could Protect Pacemakers From Hackers | Popular Science.

The PopSci piece uses this Microsoft paper, proposing the tattoos, as its primary source.

US Government to Scrutinize Patriot Radio

Alan Watt makes the MSM, again, this time for hosting his show on RBN. Also, a prediction: By 2011, the federal government will confirm that it is directly investigating RBN, or another underground radio network. — MB

Photo: Kyle May/Flickr CC

John Stadtmiller’s Republic Broadcasting Network is taking heat in the Christian Science Monitor, for broadcasting a show hosted by the head of the Guardians of the Free Republics.

Stadtmiller, a competent broadcaster, appears to be getting out in front of this week’s story, about the Guardians’ apparently clumsy attempt to get dozens of US governors to step-down. (The word “investigation” alone is enough to make a broadcaster’s heart skip a beat.)

RBN also broadcasts Alan Watt’s Cutting Through the Matrix. The weeknight show features excellent insights — often on science and technology news stories — from Watt, one of the underground’s best-known conspiracy historians. (Watt’s commentary has informed my MSM reporting on RFID technologies, for example.)

But the network also airs a show by one, rabid anti-Semite, along with other voices that might not otherwise find a significant audience. And it runs ads from Holocaust-denying publishers:

“Republican Broadcasting Network is a satellite, shortwave, and Internet radio station that features 31 shows with names like ‘Cutting Through the Matrix, ‘Govern America,’ and ‘Road Warrior Radio.’ It has loose ties to the American Free Press newspaper, which Michael calls “the most important newspaper of the radical right.’”

Watt receives no money from RBN for his show, which is supported by direct book sales and donations to his website.

via Guardians of the free Republics tied to Texas radio station / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Freemasons in the child "chipping" business

Update: The Freemasons’ child-tracking system is now available in Canada.

The program is called Masonichip, and it is meant to help parents cope with one of their worst nightmares — having their children snatched from their beds in the dead of night — by taking casts of the kids’ teeth, as well as other biometric recordings.

The “chip” in Masonichip, is an acronym for “Child Identification Program.” There is no microchipping involved in the process of creating a dossier for any child.

But the name of the program is provocative enough, particularly when it is meant to  solve a type of crime that is extremely rare (link opens the PDF version of a US government report).

This, from an uncritical piece in a local paper, south of Boston:

The program, MY C.H.I.P., Masonic Youth Childhood Identification Program, is free. Each kit includes fingerprints, tooth impressions and a video recording of the child.Jon Bond, a lodge member, said each child stands before a screen with height markings and is asked a few questions while their responses are recorded on video.

via Parents can get ID kits for children – Quincy, MA – The Patriot Ledger.

http://www.masonichip.org/index.php/component/content/article/57-masonichip-expands-to-canada.html

Scientists: Vaccines provide "herd immunity"

Naked apes. Photo: Peter O'Connor/Flickr CC

By using “herd,” the scientific community belies its insensitivity, if not its outright contempt, for the rest of humanity.

Dose the kids, protect the “herd.” That’s the language hardhearted epidemiologists are using to describe how vaccinations work to protect human populations:

“An unusual study done in 49 remote Hutterite farming colonies in western Canada has provided the surest proof yet that giving flu shots to schoolchildren protects a whole community from the disease. Although previous studies have demonstrated what scientists call ‘herd immunity,’ none have been so incontrovertible, because they were done in less isolated places with more sources of flu passing through.

Stanhope to English, Irish, herd: "Go to hell."

Credit Canadian conspiracy historian Alan Watt, for noting how scientists use the word, “herd,” in a way that fails to jibe with any citation in popular dictionaries.

The scientists are, however, using the same, precise language of that obnoxious prig, the 4th Earl of Chesterfield,  Philip Dormer Stanhope (click the excerpt below, for the full text):

via NYT: Flu shots in kids provide ‘herd immunity’ – The New York Times- msnbc.com.

Pentagon shooter aimed to create synthetic life

Photo: Zoe/Flickr CC

Mad scientist proposed creating self-assembling nanobots and “smart dust” with DNA.

This week’s anti-government, lone gunman, John Patrick Bedell, is another perfect poster boy for the government’s crackdown on the pro-pot and 9/11 truth movements.

Bedell, who was killed at a subway entrance to the Pentagon, was bent on according to the LA Times,

“revealing the truth behind the 9/11 “demolitions.”

Bedell also bore a grudge against the authorities, who busted him with weed at his California home some time ago.

But the mad scientist’s greatest passion may have been bringing about the Singularity — that future point in human evolution, predicted by Ray Kurzweil and others, when genetics, nanotechnology and robotics become a single science, reality and virtual reality become indistinguishable, and people become immortal.

Bedell, in 2006, proposed blending DNA with standard, integrated circuits, to create self-propagating “smart dust,” tiny, self-propagating — indeed, living — sensors and robots that could provide governments will blanket surveillance capabilities.

And in this way, Bedell shares something with another gun-wielding nerd in the news: UAH shooter, Amy Bishop, designer of a cyborg mechanism, the Neuristor.

Here’s Bedell’s proposal for the DNA-integrated circuit hybrids:

via Pentagon shooter apparently doubted 9/11 facts in Web posting – latimes.com.

Click here for a primer on synthetic biology.

Interested in tech from the Hub? Check out this week’s User Friendly

Latin America to UN drug warriors: Put this in your pipe, and smoke it

Photo: Esparta Palma/Flickr CC

Mexico, Argentina and Brazil are winding-down their roles in the no-win-scenario, war on drugs being waged (purportedly on Latin America’s behalf) by the United States.

And the UN is frustrated:

“The Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), in its annual report released today, stated its concern over Latin America’s “growing movement to decriminalize the possession of controlled drugs, in particular cannabis.”

via UN: Latin America undermining drug war by decriminalizing drugs / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Privacy alert: Will dummies buy the fed's "smart meter" line?

Gotcha! Through smart metering, utilities and the feds will widen their nets. (Photo: McKay Savage/Flickr CC)

The word “privacy” appears not once, in a 1,500-word request for public comment on the smart grid, released by the White House this week.

That’s because your individual privacy is the obstacle that the government, aided by the utility companies, hopes to overcome with so-called smart meters — devices that will reveal precisely how you are using the electricity you paid for.

Research into the smart grid, which includes the use of smart meters, has been paid for by hundreds of millions of your tax dollars.

So far, the only discernible benefits of the smart meters will go to the utility companies and government investigators. (No potential savings for consumers have been demonstrated.)

One question from the Office of Science and Technology does glance on the privacy issue:

“Who owns the home energy usage data? Should individual consumers and their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

Obviously, individual consumers own the juice they pay for, not the utilities. Therefore, they should own the data on where it goes on their property, be it to their electric heaters or marijuana grow bulbs.

But if the government was truly concerned about individual privacy, the same question would read:

“Should individual consumers *OR* their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

I believe the question is not written that way because the utility companies — just like the phone companies and ISPs — are not on the consumer’s side. Rather, they have a track record of collaborating with the authorities in their investigations of “suspicious behavior,” which typically means using a lot of electricity.

via Consumer Interface With the Smart Grid (at Cryptome)

Swann Security CES theft: Too "good" to be true?

I smell a setup, but I know Swann Security will deny that “Willy Wu” (who is this guy?) wasn’t paid to “rob” its CES booth earlier this month.

One thief was either not paying close attention to the booth he decided to target or he was just very confident. What the thief didn't realize was his whole act was caught on camera at the booth he had stolen from.

via Thief Steals from the Wrong Booth at CES – Las Vegas Now.

Stranger things have happened. As I mentioned earlier this month, on this blog, a major Japanese consumer electronics maker approached me with an offer to be their corporate spy at the show.

Taxpayers shell-out millions for "free" muni Wi-Fi

No divide. (Photo: D Sharon Pruitt/Flickr CC)

Still think I’m wrong about the many pitfalls of  municipal, or muni, Wi-Fi, the semi-public scheme that puts city bosses in charge of internet access?

Over the past few years, I’ve noted the corruption, the waste, and the threats to personal privacy and security posed by muni Wi-Fi. And I caught some flak on this blog, and over at Universal Hub, as a result.

Now, from Philly, where the muni Wi-Fi debacle got its wretched start, comes a report that the city is squeezing taxpayers to cover its failed attempt to compete as an ISP:

The city of Philadelphia said Wednesday it intends to purchase, for $2 million, the wireless network constructed by EarthLink Inc. to turn the entire city into a Wifi hotspot. The city said it intends to exercise an option in an agreement signed in August to buy the network from Network Acquisition Co. LLC, which took the network over from Atlanta-based EarthLink (NASDAQ:ELNK) in June 2008.

Philly’s former CIO, meanwhile, has taken-up work with the firm that sold the Philly mayor’s office on muni Wi-Fi in the first place. (Ditto for the deputy CIO in San Francisco.)

Meanwhile, back in the Bean, a similar effort is starting to look like a service badly in need of a market.

That’s because urban dwellers –rich and poor, young and old — are already using their 3G mobile phones and netbooks to grab data from the net. And cable companies are bundling-in internet access with their TV services,  for peanuts.

via Reason Magazine: Philadelphia Experiment With Municipal Wi-Fi Not Working Out So Well

Coke's face-match trickery makes suckers of Facebookers

Barr. DavidAll06/Flickr CC

I sure hate what Bob Barr put us through, back when he was leading the effort to impeach Bill Clinton.

But the man makes perfect sense when he’s talking about the privacy threats posed by intrusive, government spy technologies.

Here, Barr reveals the problem with the ungodly mashup of facial recognition software and social media, in Coca Cola “Facial Profiler” campaign:

Coca Cola is a multi-national corporation which means it operates in conjunction with and under the watchful eye of our and other national governments around the globe. Posting a picture on Coke’s website or Facebook may on the surface appear to be a harmless act; but giving a multinational corporation access to a digitized photo of one’s self contributes to the building of a globally accessible database that can be used for facial-recognition cameras and systems. The privacy implications associated with having potentially hundreds of millions of digital pictures from people throughout the world in a database or databases is astounding.

via Facial profiling and Coke Zero game | The Barr Code.

The CIA-backed technology that searches your face for signs of “bad intents” already exists, of course.

Poppa Baard. Photo: Chris Taggart

This bit reminds me, by the way, of my own observation last October that Bob Barr looks like a Baard.