Rfid @ MindSay


 

   
The last bastion...
Corporations are inherently evil, and are, I believe, the only entities capable of true evil. The reason? They have no conscience. They have the rights of a human under law, and in many cases they have rights humans don't enjoy, but they have no mind, and therefore no concept of right and wrong. They are driven and controlled by only one single desire; the desire - nay, the need - to make MORE profit than they did last year or last quarter. And let's be clear...the need is not to make a profit, it's not to make a large profit, it's to make MORE profit than they did last year, in total defiance of Newton's first law, and with utter disregard of little things like honour, decency, morality, or human rights. These things are not guidelines for corporations, they are impediments to be overcome. Individuals working for these companies have little or no control over the actions and activities of the corporation because failure to produce these increased profits means unemployment. Officers of corporations who are dismissed for failing to produce increased profit are replaced by others who will.

At the very base of the evil is the common shareholder. The ones who really have any power are corporations themselves of course, but there are many, many people who "play the stockmarket" for fun and profit who have no idea of the things being done in their name. There are enough of them however to make a difference. And it is they who need to be educated, along with every other human on earth.

It is in the interests of the corporations to fight for control of the most powerful weapon of the twenty-first century; the internet. Yes the net was originally designed as a military tool, but that tool has now become the most efficient means of communication known to man - far more powerful than the telephone or fax, and probably more powerful than even TV and radio. Of course the corporations and their ad agencies know that, and like our mate Rupert (thank GOD he changed nationality and we no longer have to accept him as an Australian, despite his accent) they are trying to buy up the most popular chunks of it, and reshape it to deliver their messages and silence their foes.

This is where things like blogging come in. Here peope are free to say whatever they want to say until Rupert and his buddies step in, buy the offending piece, ban free speech, and use it to deliver yet more advertising. This very space will follow suit if it gains enough notoriety, and gaining notoriety on the internet is incredibly simple-you merely have to be mentioned on a TV show or one of the more popular websites and instantly millions of people know your name. Take this blog. It is a tiny little nothing which took me a couple of hours, no technical knowledge  and absolutely no money to construct,. It has been going two days and has been seen by probably three people, in six months it will probably have been seen by about five people. Yet if it was mentioned on or linked to by Slashdot, Kottke, Boing Boing, or Digg to name but a few, it would be instantly famous, would recieve millions of visitors and become a famous net destination in its own right. I could put ads on it and make a decent amount of money, and my message would reach millions.

Rupert can't afford to have that, which is why he will buy all of the sites mentioned above and control who they link to, and more importantly, who they dont.

So what can you do? Easy, go to the homepage mentioned above, and start your own blog. My sitxy something year old mum can do it, as can my eight year old nephew. It takes ten minutes to set up, and if, unlike me, you have an interesting message, a great writing style, and a clever sense of humour you can actually do it for a living. Take Jason Kottke,  http://www.kottke.org/ every day milions read his blog, and it is now his full time job, and he doesnt even have a single ad on his site, he survives purely on the small donations provided by people who appreciate his work. For another great example of the good which can be done by this phenomenon we call the net, have a look at sites like Give Meaning: http://www.givemeaning.com/default.aspx a site which relies on small donations, made incredibly easy by PayPal www.paypal.com  and which can achieve incredible things. Just watch out that paypal, which is owned by ebay, doesn't get bought out by Newscorp or Bayer Pharmeceutical.
 
 
   
 

RFID about to explode Albrecht and Noory paint chilling future of a prisonplanet
Katherine Albrecht - Coast to Coast AM
Govt. Tracking: RFID & NAIS
Fri Mar 17, 2006 18:13
 

POSTED AT: APFN POGO "RADIO YOUR WAY"
http://www.apfn.net/pogo.htm

3/16/06 George Noory, Coast to Coast
WHAT IS RFID?

http://www.spychips.com/what-is-rfid.html

Govt. Tracking: RFID & NAIS
Consumer privacy expert Katherine Albrecht, joined by activists Pat Showalter and Celeste Bishop in hour two, spoke out against the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), a USDA plan to track farm animals using RFID chips. Showalter and Bishop, who both own animals in a small scale, non-commercial capacity, said the new regulations are very burdensome for small farmers. For instance, the "Premises Identification" part of the plan requires owners to report any movements or visitors of the animals, even in the case of a few chickens and goats. The cost and time for such monitoring is prohibitive and also an invasion of their privacy, they argued.

Technology is being used to clamp down and control food in general, said Albrecht, who compared the NAIS plan to the tracking done with grocery loyalty cards, and the efforts to restrict farmers' rights to seeds. In regards to the NAIS, she hoped that small farmers will refuse to comply with the plan, as she believes it does nothing to make the food supply safer (the stated goal of the program), and it discourages self-sufficiency.

Further, the RFID chips, used to track the animals, and recently introduced in passports, are susceptible to hackers who can infect large databases with malicious viruses, she pointed out. The bigger picture is that the government is seeking a top down control of the populace on a global level, and there is "a move afoot to number everything and everyone," said Albrecht. However, she finds that US citizens are more prone to resisting these efforts than Europeans, and that the NAIS may be the issue that wakes people up.

http://www.coasttocoastam.com/shows/2006/03/15.html#recap
http://www.nocards.org/

Audios:
#1 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A001I06031523045300550-rfid1.MP3 (4.20MB) 6Min 11 Sec

#2 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A001I06031523045300550-rfid2.MP3 (4.28MB) 6Min 13 Sec

#3 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06031523555700550-rfid3.MP3 (4.56MB) 6Min 37 Sec

#4 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid4.MP3 (4.42MB) 6Min 25 Sec

#5 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06031523555700550-rfid5.MP3 (4.55MB) 6Min 37 Sec

#6 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid6.MP3 (4.60MB) 6Min 41 Sec

#7 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid7.MP3 (5.81MB) 8Min 26 Sec

#8 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06031601051000550-rfid8.MP3 (3.10MB) 4Min 29 Sec

#9 http://www.apfn.net/audio/A004I06031602453700550-rfid9.MP3 (4.34MB) 18Min 58 Sec

"You can run, but you may not be able to hide. Not just from Big Brother, but Big Business, writes Katherine Albrecht in her book Spychips, a detailed analysis of how Radio Frequency Identification technology -- RFID for short -- threatens to erode the last vestiges of our privacy."

Listen: http://www.eyeonbooks.com/EOB/1105/albrecht.wax
RECENT CASPIAN MEDIA:
http://www.spychips.com/media/media_clips.html

RFID VULNERABLE TO VIRUSES!
Hackers could deploy rogue RFID tags programmed with a virus to wreak havoc on associated databases... Countermeasures will "take time, people, and money to implement."
>> click here to read more!
http://www.spychips.com/press-releases/rfid-virus.html
=======================
POSTED AT: APFN POGO "RADIO YOUR WAY"
http://www.apfn.net/pogo.htm
 
 
 

   
Barcode

http://www.rediff.com/money/2005/may/05retail.htm

In US,RFID is getting standardised. In India, Barcode is yet to be standardised. Pathetic huh? -r-

 
 
   
 

 
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