View Full Version : RFID chips
Nenuphar
16th April 2010, 14:45
Two related articles about RFID chips:
"Ex-IBM Employee reveals TV Abandoned Analog Band to Make Room for RFID Chips"
http://dprogram.net/2009/07/12/ex-ibm-employee-reveals-tv-abandoned-analog-band-to-make-room-for-rfid-chips/
"An Introduction to New Technologies"
http://www.michaeljournal.org/newtechno.htm
Swami
16th April 2010, 14:48
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0vZigwn09I
Swanny
16th April 2010, 17:41
I like that :) I want one
Gita
17th April 2010, 12:24
Chipless Tagging - No More Need For Implanted Chips
Quote
,'The process developed by Somark involves a geometric array of micro-needles and an ink capsule, which is used to 'tattoo' an animal. The ink can be detected from 4 feet away. A startup company developing chipless RFID ink has tested its product on cattle and laboratory rats.
Somark Innovations announced this week that it successfully tested biocompatible RFID ink, which can be read through animal hairs. The passive RFID technology could be used to identify and track cows to reduce financial losses from Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (mad cow disease) scares. Somark, which formed in 2005, is located at the Center for Emerging Technologies in St. Louis. The company is raising Series A equity financing and plans to license the technology to secondary markets, which could include laboratory animals, dogs, cats, prime cuts of meat, and military personnel.'
Read more: Chipless Tagging - No More Need For Implanted Chips (http://beforeitsnews.com/story/32708/Chipless_Mark_Of_The_Beast_Invisible_RFID_Ink_Safe_For_Humans%2C_Cattle%2C_Co._Says.html)
Unquote
Swanny
17th April 2010, 17:47
Who in their right mind would have a government tattoo??
Maybe they will slip it in the normal tattoo ink??
Sunny d
17th April 2010, 18:11
Who in their right mind would have a government tattoo??
Maybe they will slip it in the normal tattoo ink??
gross Swanster, but you might be right.
In holland they take fingerprints and use chips in your I.D.card or passport since last year. (you have to take your ID with you when you go out normally)I made sure I had new ones before this new fingerprintlaw took off.
Goverment tattoo my ass, the nazi's did the same :sad:
Swami
17th April 2010, 18:22
Goverment tattoo my ass, the nazi's did the same :sad:
Thats a 10-4, loud & clear Sis........:cheer2:
One more reason I never took tattoo's......
Barron
21st April 2010, 08:58
For 2 of the better and more informative sites re chips please visit: www.spychips.com and http://www.wethepeoplewillnotbechipped.com/
Cheers
Mulder
21st April 2010, 09:38
I first found out the RFID chip was the mark of the beast by reading Delores Cannon (Conversations with Nostradamus). There are some SCAREY youtube videos of people accepting the chip - I can't watch them, thats how upset I am!! I can see how the chips will be incrementally accepted - Banks will do away with all money and only use these chips. People will lose their job, house, car, money if they are not chipped. I hope I choose a different future, as I don't want to go through the mark of the beast! Although even if 99% of people accept the chip, it won't be too late to revolt - in France after 1789 over 10% of people were executed for siding with the French Royals, so the same thing can happen again if almost everyone revolts after the chip is enforced.
Swami
21st April 2010, 10:58
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/attachment.php?attachmentid=737
bluestflame
27th November 2010, 12:46
just had a survey popup from within hotmail ...
http://amch.questionmarket.com/images/survey/dl_threeicons/hor_logo.gif
dynamic logic a millward brown company
I thought it interesting got a feeling typed in a few things in a search engine "dynamic logic millward brown affiliates"
:Dynamic Logic is a Millward Brown company, which is part of The Kantar Group, the information and consultancy arm of WPP.
so on a hunch did a lookup with text "The Kantar Group rfid" ( I have no idea why i chose to include RFID in the search but bear with me )
came across this link : http://www.linkedin.com/in/taylorholsinger
a few interesting things on this site
Taylor Holsinger’s Specialties:
• Market research, Media analytics, marketing analytics, business analytics, online marketing, search marketing, display marketing, data analysis, business intelligence, product management, and product planning.
• Patent holder for RFID market research methodology
Taylor Holsinger’s Honors:
Patent application, RFID technology, 2005
Frost & Sullivan Executive Summit Outstanding Presentation (perfect score from participants), 2005
Rookie of the Year, The Nielsen Company, 1999
putting this up cos I think others might be able to pull it apart and perhaps investigate further , or pay more attention if they have thier own email based surveys popping up asking how old you are and where you are from when it's already recorded in thier email acccount
I mention that it popped up itself unannounced when i went to check my hotmail account , unbidden ,
*** note to Bill , really think there's more to this would be interested to get your take on it , regards , Shaun ~☼~
"
morguana
27th November 2010, 14:06
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?3477-Verichip....you-will-be-assimilated&highlight=Chips+assimilated
Some more info about chipping found here
m
bluestflame
27th November 2010, 14:08
thanks Morguana ~☼~
Ammit
27th November 2010, 15:02
Does anyone have any proof that the devices are hidden in personal items?
The doc i read stated " semi-passive and active RFID chips (Radio Frequency Identification Devices) implanted in new clothing, in items such as Gillette Fusion blades, and in countless other products that become one’s personal belongings."
I have just taken a complete blade apart and found nothin, I suppose it could be in the razor holder.
Fredkc
27th November 2010, 16:01
First thing I found in a search....
New American: (http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/tech-mainmenu-30/computers/4157-wal-mart-to-embed-rfid-tags-in-clothing-beginning-august-1)
Beginning August 1, men’s blue jeans and underwear sold at Walmart will carry electronic radio identification tags. The company, the world’s largest retailer, insists the devices are crucial to improving the logistics of inventory management, while critics point to the privacy concerns associated with the tags.
The markers in question, called radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags, are implanted in the garments and can be read by hand-held scanners. Wal-Mart officials praise the portability of the tags and the boost in speed and accuracy they bring to inventory control. “This ability to wave the wand and have a sense of all the products that are on the floor or in the back room in seconds is something that we feel can really transform our business,” crows Raul Vasquez, Wal-Mart’s representative for its stores in the western states.
RFID tags are nothing new at Walmart (or many other retailers). Until now, however, the tags were chiefly used to track pallets of goods from factory to warehouse to the local outlet. After August 1, though, for the first time Walmart will bring the technology out of the storeroom and into the consumer’s pants — literally.
PS: If you're looking for 1st hand, hard evidence, sorry, I don't shop at Wal-Mart. ;)
Fred
Banshee
27th November 2010, 16:47
Well that would be it- don't shop at Walmart and send them a letter of protest.
That said, why just men's jeans? Is the software proprietary or widely used? Are the RFIDs deactivated at check out?
bluestflame
27th November 2010, 23:24
possibility the devices imbedded in garments are also able to be read by other scanners , like the ones at airports , being a radio frequency identification device not unreasonable to assume they are also capable of sending recieving a signal from other technologies such as cell phone network ....
just food for thought ...the infrastructure is already there
just like the elite to have everything in place and well tested "in the field" well in advance of the implementation date
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