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NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 12:53 PM
VERICHIP (http://www.technovelgy.com/graphics/content/verichip-patient.jpg)

The Verichip

The maker of an implantable human ID chip has launched a national campaign to promote the device, offering $50 discounts to the first 100,000 people who register to get embedded with the microchip.

Applied Digital Solutions has coined the tagline "Get Chipped" to market its product, VeriChip.
The rice-size device costs $200. Those implanted must also pay for the doctor's injection fee and a monthly $10 database maintenance charge, said ADS spokesman Matthew Cossolotto.

The VeriChip emits a 125-kilohertz radio frequency signal that transmits its unique ID number to a scanner. The number then accesses a computer database containing the client's file. Customers fill out a form detailing the information they want linked to their chip when they undergo the procedure, Cossolotto said.

Earlier this week, ADS announced that the FDA had ruled that the VeriChip was not a regulated device when used for "security, financial and personal identification/safety applications."

The agency's sudden approval of the microchip came despite an FDA investigator's concern about the potential health effects of the device in humans. (Microchips have been used to track animals for years.)

The company is marketing the device for a variety of security applications, including:

* Controlling access to physical structures, such as government or private sector offices or nuclear power plants. Instead of swiping a smart card, employees could swipe the arm containing the chip.

* Reducing financial fraud. In this scenario, people could use their chip to withdraw money from ATMs; their accounts could not be accessed unless they were physically present.

* Decreasing identity theft. People could use the chip as a password to access their computer at home, for example.

Cossolotto said ADS has gotten "hundreds" of inquiries from people interested in being implanted.

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 12:55 PM
ID SNIPER (http://www.backfire.dk/EMPIRENORTH/newsite/img/EN03-223b_low.jpg)

The ID SNIPERTM rifle designed by EMPIRE NORTH

What is the ID SNIPERTM rifle?

It is used to implant a GPS-microchip in the body of a human being, using a high powered sniper rifle as the long distance injector. The microchip will enter the body and stay there, causing no internal damage, and only a very small amount of physical pain to the target. It will feel like a mosquito-bite lasting a fraction of a second. At the same time a digital camcorder with a zoom-lense fitted within the scope will take a high-resolution picture of the target. This picture will be stored on a memory card for later image-analysis.

Why use the ID SNIPERTM rifle?

As the urban battlefield grows more complex and intense, new ways of managing and controlling crowds are needed. The attention of the media changes the rules of the game. Sometimes it is difficult to engage the enemy in the streets without causing damage to the all important image of the state. Instead EMPIRE NORTH suggests to mark and identify a suspicious subject on a safe distance, enabeling the national law enforcement agency to keep track on the target through a satellite in the weeks to come.

The ID SNIPERTM rifle was presented by Empire North in Beijing at the China Police 2002 exhibition

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 12:56 PM
FACE SCANNING CAMERAS (http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1500000/images/_1500017_surveillcam150.jpg)

The technology works by converting a photograph or video image of a face into an equation that describes the geometric characteristics of a person's face, said Dr Joseph Atick, president and CEO of Visionics, one of the companies that produces face recognition as well as other biometric technologies.

Software converts the facial images into an 84-byte file called a face print. The software then does a mathematical comparison with the face prints it collects through the cameras against a database of known face prints, such as criminals or terrorists, Dr Atick said.

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 12:57 PM
BLACK BOX (http://images.ibsys.com/2003/0217/1981349_200X150.jpg)

Automobile black boxes

Drivers face automatic speeding fines without being caught by the police or roadside cameras under a proposal being studied by the Government to fit all cars with satellite tracking devices for road tolls.
Under the anti-congestion tolling plan being examined by the Department for Transport, all vehicles would be fitted with a 'black box' to charge drivers according to the type of road they are using and when they are driving.

But transport experts believe the equipment will pave the way for 24-hour monitoring of drivers to see if they break the speed limit. It could also be used to determine whether drivers were speeding before an accident.

The Government is backing trials of an advanced system which would tell the black box when it entered a speed limit and prevent the vehicle going faster. The equipment could also find drivers who have not paid vehicle duty or insurance.

The system would use global positioning systems and computer technology. It would be easy to catch speeders and there are no legal obstacles - tachographs in lorries, which record speed and length of time behind the wheel, are already examined after accidents.

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 12:59 PM
ANOTHA CAMERA!! (http://www.securityinfowatch.com/article/photos/1120592712288_07-05-ChicagoGunshots.jpg)

CHICAGO -- The police are watching. And in Chicago, they're listening, too.

City officials are using new technology that recognizes the sound of a gunshot within a two-block radius, pinpoints the source, turns a surveillance camera toward the shooter and places a 911 call. Officials can then track the shooter and dispatch officers to the scene.

Welcome to crime-fighting in the 21st century

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 01:00 PM
UNMANNED DRONES (http://www.truthout.org/imgs.art_01/3.030805A-2.jpg)

WASHINGTON When it flies overhead at 65,000 feet - or 12 miles high - an unmanned airplane called Global Hawk can spy a milk carton sitting on a picnic table, manufacturer Northrop Grumman Corp. says.

The U.S. Air Force employed this flying drone and a smaller one called Predator effectively over Iraq. Next, the federal government is considering use of the $35 million Global Hawk and other unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, as part of high-tech arsenal to protect the United States.

Sen. John W. Warner of Virginia, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has urged President Bush to "explore the option of using UAVs for the critical homeland defense mission." He suggested uses from patrolling borders to monitoring the shipping of hazardous materials and security for dams, power plants and drinking-water utilities.

Top officials at the new Department of Homeland Security have discussed a demonstration UAV project. The Coast Guard has awarded a contract to Bell Helicopter for three prototype Eagle Eye UAVs, an aircraft that takes off like a helicopter and flies like an airplane.

Industry representatives are enthusiastic about the drones' potential.

"I believe we will see Predator and Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) watching over major events, such as the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl, in the not-too-distant future," Brad Brown, then-president of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International wrote earlier this year.

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 01:02 PM
MICRO AIR VEHICLES (MAVS) (http://media.popularmechanics.com/images/b-4.jpg)

MICROSCOPIC planes, with cameras not much bigger than insects, are being developed by American scientists to spy on enemy positions in wars of the future.

An extraordinary array of micro air vehicles (MAVs), all easily held in the palm of the hand, is emerging from experimental laboratories throughout the United States. Most are only six inches long.

Although their size would limit their operational range, research is under way to design small rockets that could propel them long distances.

Compared with the 103ft wingspan of manned American U2 spy planes that take photographs from an altitude of more than 70,000ft, the MAVs will be tiny cousins. But the idea of minute surveillance planes taking pictures of enemy troops from only 300ft up is being taken seriously in the US, according to the latest edition of Jane’s International Defence Review.

One MAV being developed by the US Naval Research Laboratory has electric motors on each wingtip to drive folding propellers. The report says that the US Navy is mainly interested in a MAV capable of radar jamming, and its tactical electronic warfare division is designing one with sufficient power for flights of up to 30 minutes. One idea is for a pencil-shaped motor “weighing no more than six grammes”. Its speed would be about 30ft a second — as fast as an Olympic sprinter.

Studies in America on hand-size spy planes began in the early 1990s, and two years ago the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) launched a four-year MAV programme costing $35 million (£23 million). It chose six inches as the maximum dimension for MAVs, deliberately to push the technology as far as possible.

The report adds: “The small size and light weight of MAVs result in many potential advantages. In addition to low cost and inherently stealthy operation — in terms of noise, radar and visual signatures — these include the ability to carry out unconventional missions.”

One role could be to detect and identify biological or chemical agents. If used as a radar-jammer, it could “fly close enough to the target to be effective”. Another concept is to provide a downed pilot with reconnaissance information or to transmit a signal for search and rescue forces.

Jane’s said that prototypes cost up to $50,000 each (about £33,000), but DARPA expected this to drop to $5,000 in production and “hopes to achieve a figure as low as $1,000”.

Aerodynamics is one of the main challenges for designers. “The small size and low speed means they operate in an environment more common to small birds and large insects.”

Researchers are developing a camera that weighs less than one gramme, with an aperture of 2.6mm capable of clear images from 300ft high.

Different ways are being studied for launching MAVs. Apart from tiny rockets, other ideas include “piggy-backing” them on air-launched guided missiles or releasing them from unmanned air vehicles such as the American Predator used over Kosovo and Bosnia.

chuck
08-03-2005, 01:09 PM
the Verichip and all other RFID's are nothing new...both of my dogs have had them since they were born, the technology has always been there just putting them in humans was always the big debate. i know a good bit of people on here who have them in their car's for the 400 toll booths too.

PhAtBoYMr2
08-03-2005, 02:17 PM
damn thats some crazy shit

next thing you know well have actual terminators runnin around

5thgcelica
08-03-2005, 02:19 PM
wow..crazy shat

Spyder
08-03-2005, 02:43 PM
i dont want a verichip mommy i promise i will be good!

JoeCoolinATL
08-03-2005, 03:30 PM
UNMANNED DRONES (http://www.truthout.org/imgs.art_01/3.030805A-2.jpg)

WASHINGTON When it flies overhead at 65,000 feet - or 12 miles high - an unmanned airplane called Global Hawk can spy a milk carton sitting on a picnic table, manufacturer Northrop Grumman Corp. says.

The U.S. Air Force employed this flying drone and a smaller one called Predator effectively over Iraq. Next, the federal government is considering use of the $35 million Global Hawk and other unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, as part of high-tech arsenal to protect the United States.

Sen. John W. Warner of Virginia, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has urged President Bush to "explore the option of using UAVs for the critical homeland defense mission." He suggested uses from patrolling borders to monitoring the shipping of hazardous materials and security for dams, power plants and drinking-water utilities.

Top officials at the new Department of Homeland Security have discussed a demonstration UAV project. The Coast Guard has awarded a contract to Bell Helicopter for three prototype Eagle Eye UAVs, an aircraft that takes off like a helicopter and flies like an airplane.

Industry representatives are enthusiastic about the drones' potential.

"I believe we will see Predator and Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) watching over major events, such as the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl, in the not-too-distant future," Brad Brown, then-president of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International wrote earlier this year.




this is super old news. the rest is old news as well tho.

mocha latte cupcake
08-03-2005, 04:00 PM
sum of that ish is scary! but cool stuff none the less... minus the car related products!

99ITRGIRL
08-03-2005, 04:06 PM
sum of that ish is scary! but cool stuff none the less... minus the car related products!
^TRUE. It feels like all of a sudden, the world will be furturistic....scary.

NzProjeKt
08-03-2005, 10:43 PM
this is super old news. the rest is old news as well tho.
Yea true.. But you would be surprised how many people havent heard about these..

Just tryin to give a heads up on what type shit is to come....

b18hb
08-03-2005, 11:37 PM
i like having my liberties. the technology is cool, but i think it imposes too much. the fact that you can have a gps locater shot into you and not know it is a little unsettling, as is the "black box" for cars.