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windcatcher

How long before we will all have computer chips in us?

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"At LEAST 4-5 years from now.

Okay, here is my prediction: AT LEAST 4 seconds from now. :)



{Bob Barker Voice} RhondaLea is closet without going over...

...
Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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I respectfully decline the offer of an implanted chip.

I do not trust the government - any government - not to abuse personal information.



That's ok, the crystal in your hand lit up a long time ago.

...
Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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seriously. Look it up. That kind of notion has been going on for awhile now. Mostly disavowed by mainstream Christians, but not all.



It's one time to be thankful for the fundies in the red states. They're exactly the type that are leaping to give up personal freedoms for perceived security.

Douglas Adams did write of an easy identity card that would prevent the owner from needing to give tissue, saliva, skin, urine tests in order to verify identity. That sort of smart card, coupled with some sort of biometric, will come along before imbedded chips will.

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you're selling your brain very short if you think 100gigs will help!



:D:D:D:P

You have no idea what I have to keep track of......and how much I manage to forget anyway:S.......100 gigs would be a good start.......I have always wanted a pornographic uhhhh.....photographic memory:):D

Marc SCR 6046 SCS 3004


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As for information, on one hand, giving the government access to everything about me is a tad scary.



Given that they are riddled with corruption and are virtually guaranteed to abuse your information, uh, yeah. :|


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On the other though, they already probably do.



Is that a reason to let them keep on doing it? Probably not.

-
-Jeffrey
"With tha thoughts of a militant mind... Hard line, hard line after hard line!"

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I respectfully decline the offer of an implanted chip.

I do not trust the government - any government - not to abuse personal information.




+1

Right on.

The only way to be sure they don't abuse it is to see to it that they never get the chance.

Given the chance, it will be abused... Probably right from the outset; but if not, then before too long.

No flippin' way is the government ever going to be implanting anything in me with my consent; and if they try it without my consent, it'll probably cost them some personnel.

My objection has nothing at all to do with "number of the beast" nonsense. It has everything to do with protecting myself from suffering further abuse by government, which is made up of people -- and the people who gravitate toward positions in government are the ones who thrill to exert power over how others live. (Exactly the wrong people who should run the world's machinery.)


-
-Jeffrey
"With tha thoughts of a militant mind... Hard line, hard line after hard line!"

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I respectfully decline the offer of an implanted chip.

I do not trust the government - any government - not to abuse personal information.



That's ok, the crystal in your hand lit up a long time ago.



Nice one. ;)

-
Jim
"Like" - The modern day comma
Good bye, my friends. You are missed.

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Douglas Adams did write of an easy identity card that would prevent the owner from needing to give tissue, saliva, skin, urine tests in order to verify identity. That sort of smart card, coupled with some sort of biometric, will come along before imbedded chips will.



Ah, but the whole point of the card was that you didn't need to do fingerprint or retina scans or voice recognizion or tissue samples, since those are so complicated. It was just the card. A small downside was the fact that "identity theft" became incredibly easy. Just take the card.

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