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The We the People will not be Chipped - No Verichip Inside Movement, is based on the irrefutable fact, that mankind has inalienable human rights that are absolute and can not be debased, nor perverted. Human life can not be degraded to a 16 digit RFID chip number embedded under you skin under any circumstance. By uniting on this common ground, we can send a strong message to the IBM funded Verichip that
We The People Will Not Be Chipped!
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Radio Interviews ? We can discuss human inventorying, biometrics, GIG, RFID, fMRI, Military Industrial Complex , Internet Censorship , Electronic Health Records , Internet Of Things, Augmented Reality , AmI, M2M , H+ , Hive Mind , Transhumanism with your listeners ? Email radio@wethepeoplewillnotbechipped.com
When Verichip micro-chipped the Alzheimer patients
I remained silent
I was not an Alzheimer patient
When Verichip micro-chipped the Diabetic and AIDS patients
I remained silent;
I was not an AIDS patient nor a Diabetic
When Verichip micro-chipped the Military
I did not speak out;
I was not in the Military
When Verichip came for the activists
I remained silent;
I was not an Activist
When they came to microchip me ,
there was no one left to speak out

RADIO INTERVIEWS? TV? We are happy to discuss the human inventorying issue with your listeners and viewers . Email radio@wethepeoplewillnotbechipped.com



“Indeed, almost anything—any PERSON , any object, any process or any service, for any organization, large or small—can become digitally aware and networked”
IBM CEO Sam Palmisano to the Council of Foreign Relations

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| Parliamentary reception on DNA database confirms this as an election issue for Black Britain |
A parliamentary reception on the impact that the national criminal DNA database has had on innocent people the African Caribbean community has confirmed that this has become an election issue for black Britain.
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| Sex Brain Chip Being Developed |
 You know the world of science has taken a dark and dangerous turn when new medical fix-its are based off fictional, humorous props in Woody Allen films. In Allen's 1973 film Sleeper, a frustrated, frigid society in 2173 step into an Orgasmatron (a dressed-up closet) to induce orgasms.
Pretty cool idea—for a movie.
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| The Uncertain Future of Transhumanism |
On the horizontal axis is Opposition to Transhumanism: Will it be strong, perhaps even getting stronger as transformative new technologies emerge? Or will it weaken, either due to slower than expected tech development or because a large majority of people simply accept transhumanist concepts without much argument?
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| DARPA to build military App Store, battlefield 3G |
Register -
In an announcement issued yesterday, DARPA added to its recent "Mobile Apps for the Military" plan by outlining a further "Transformative Apps" scheme. ...
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| Forget Airport Body Scanners: DARPA Wants to X-Ray Earth |
Wired News -
Just last month, the Pentagon's risk-taking research arm, DARPA, announced plans for a program called 'Transparent Earth'. They're spending $4 million this ...

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| Payments Summit draws up plan to expand contactless use |
Smart Card 3rd Annual Payments Summit, an event featuring the contactless payment phenomenon becoming more popular in the world’s leading banks, took place February 23rd – 25th in Salt Lake City.
The Smart Card Alliance is working to enhance a broader understanding, adoption and use of smart card technology. Participants at the February Summit covered an array of issues concerning contactless payments in transit systems, mobile payments and retailers. With EMV implementation as their primary concern, they looked at the numbers and considered future plans for expansion.
Participants discussed the widespread adoption of contactless payments beginning with U.S. transit fare collection systems. Currently 12 U.S. airports are deploying contactless PayPass acceptance while MasterCard has issued 70 million PayPass cards, the majority of which in the U.S.
EMV was also a hot topic at the conference. Dodd Roberts, president of the Merchant Advisory Group (MAG), an organization of large U.S. retailers, said his group sees EMV as being inevitable. “If I’m that retailer, I know at some point in the future I have to invest to be EMV capable. I see that as a foregone conclusion. To move that up in my timeline, I’d need to know everyone is on board – here’s the timeline, here’s the roadmap, here’s where you are going and here’s the date.”
Robert Carr, CEO of Heartland Payments Systems, also spoke at the conference and while fully supportive of EMV as the ultimate end point, he argued that the industry can’t get there fast enough, pointing out that Canada’s ‘fast’ EMV implementation took eight years.
Carr has worked toward the goal of making Heartland the most secure payment processor in the world, and has moved toward end-to-end encryption because it is a solution that his company could get to market quickly and unilaterally, though they have tried to make it a standard
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| Barclaycard bumps up spending limit for contactless cards |
UK’s Barclaycard is now allowing customers to pay for greater value items with their contactless credit and debit cards, bumping the limit up from £10 to £15 per purchase, according to which4u.co.uk.
Barclaycard hopes that the increased spending range will encourage more retailers to implement the technology.
According to Barclaycard, there are currently six million of the firm’s contactless cards in circulation in the UK, accepted at some 20,000 outlets.
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| Canada promised biometric passports |
After first promising its citizens biometric passports in 2008, the Canadian government has promised to move the program back into items they intend to deliver to its citizens. The announcement came during a throne speech on March 3 that discussed multiple items that had been promised to be included in the federal 2008 budget, but were cut for various reasons.
Originally, the biometric passport was tabled due to worries over implementation costs and logistics as well as questions surrounding its proposed ten year validation span. While those behind the push for bringing the project back are interested in what the technology can do to improve national security, some politicians are still questioning if biometrics are accurate enough and if privacy concerns are being considered enough in the implementation of the project.
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| South Africa stalls smart ID project |
South Africa is putting on hold indefinitely its smart card ID project, according to itweb.co.za.
Home Affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma stated that her department has run out of money after reallocating R114 million meant for the project to “other things,” ITWeb reports.
According to Dlamini-Zuma, the project will be stalled at least until the next financial year, at which time the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) will put a bid for more funding.
The smart cards were originally intended to replace the old national ID cards and provide new services such as the payment of pensions and social grants.
Despite the setback, Dlamini-Zuma says that the DHA is “still pursuing the project.”
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| Staten Island Railway to get contactless makeover |
A new smart card based fare system is in the works for the Saten Island Railway (SIR), according to silive.com.
The MTA has already installed new turnstiles at the Tompkinsville and Grasmere stations, and plans to finish the transition to contactless payment within the next few years.
The renovation of the once-free railway is part of MTA’s plan to raise more revenue and cut down on crime.
After onboard fare collectors were removed in 1997, the SIR has lost approximately $3.4 million a year. The MTA expects the Tompkinsville station alone will pull in over $700,000 annually.
As of now, SIR riders are still using Metro cards to pay, but the MTA will issue contactless smart cards in the next few years once the system goes online.
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| ClearCube releases new zero client smart card reader |
ClearCube Technology has announced the launch of its I9424 PCoIP zero client with integrated smart card reader.
The ClearCube I9424 is a single client that enables smart card access to protected resources for task and knowledge workers.
According to ClearCube, the device was developed to satisfy global governments’ needs for secure computing solutions.
The I9424 features a tamper-proof rugged case and includes a port for a Kensington lock for additional physical security.
ClearCube is now offering a free trial of the new reader via the company’swebsite
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