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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!
Link to our website with one of these banners and help the cause:

When Verichip microchipped the Alzheimer patients I remained silent;
I was not an Alzheimer patient.
When Verichip microchipped the Diabetic and AIDS patients I remained silent;
I was not an AIDS patient nor a Diabetic.
When Verichip microchipped 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.

Do you want to talk to us about this rapidly approaching agenda? 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 ? TV? We are happy to discuss the human inventorying issue with your listeners and viewers. Email us now here: radio@wethepeoplewillnotbechipped.com
Follow us with social networking to keep up to date!
WANT TO HELP? Email your local government representative and tell them about the 'Bodily Integrity Act' and encourage them to find out more about this insidious agenda. Click here to read about the "Bodily Integrity Act". To find contact numbers and email addresses for Australian representatives, visit http://www.wethepeoplewillnotbechipped.com/action and get on their backs. We the people will not be chipped!

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| Android Surpasses Apple's iOS in Global Market |
 Google's Android has overtaken Apple's iOS in the global smartphone operating system market, the Financial Times reported Friday.
According to market researcher Gartner, Android's market share climbed to 17.2 percent in the second quarter to rank third after Nokia's Symbian (41.2 percent) and Research In Motion's BlackBerry (18.2 percent).
iOS, used in the iPhone and other Apple mobile devices, slipped to fourth place with 14.2 percent.
Android is especially popular in the U.S. where it has also pushed aside Nokia and RIM to dominate the market, the business daily reported.
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| Nanotech tea bag creates safe drinking water instantly, for less than a penny |
 A new "tea bag" uses nano-fibers to suck contaminants and bacteria out of water, providing a desperately-needed, cheap solution for the billions of people without clean drinking water.
Researchers at South Africa's Stellenbosch University made the device from the same material used for the bags of the country's popular rooibos tea. Inside the sachets are two tiny destroyers of all things unsafe: ultra-thin nanoscale fibers, which filter harmful contaminants, and bacteria-killing grains of carbon.
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| Outrage as 'naked scans' stored by police |
 A PRIVACY group has filed a lawsuit to stop controversial airport body scanning following claims tens of thousands of images have been stored or recorded.
The move by the US’s Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) comes amid revelations that some police agencies are storing the images.
The full-body scanners, which are planned to be rolled out around the nation’s airports next year, allow screeners to detect non-metallic devices, objects and weapons concealed on a person's body.
It also reveals body outlines, organs and genitals.
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| New Zealand And Australia Begin Fingerprint Immigration Checks |
 Immigration New Zealand (INZ) has begun fingerprint checks with Australia as part of a biometric programme to strengthen border security and prevent identity fraud.
The programme will expand to include checks with the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States under the umbrella of the Five Country Conference (FCC), which has developed a system for securely - and with substantial privacy safeguards - matching fingerprint biometrics of persons of interest. Fingerprints of FCC citizens will not be shared.
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| Operators targeting Texas, Utah for contactless payment trials |
AT&T (NYSE:T) and Verizon Wireless (NYSE:VZ) reportedly will begin trialing their proposed contactless payment system in mid-2011, launching tests in markets including Austin, Texas, Minneapolis and Salt Lake City. Citing sources speaking anonymously due to confidentiality agreements, Bloomberg adds the m-payment solution--codenamed Mercury--may also target Atlanta during its initial consumer trial phase.
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| Soon, vehicles will have high-tech number plates |
 The registration number plate of your car will soon have RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology, which will make it easier for the RTO and traffic police to get details about you and your car even from 300 ft away.
Transport ministerRadhakrishna Vikhe-Patil told TOI that tenders are being floated to procure the technology for embedding chips on number plates across Mumbai. The micro-chip will store data of the car owner, including registration details, chassis number and RTO details. It can be scanned using chip-readers from a distance of upto 300 ft.
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| Survey says Brits are tired of queueing |
 New research from Barclays and Barclaycard shows that Britons are fed up with waiting in line, with two-fifths of customers refusing to queue for longer than two minutes and two-thirds regularly abandoning purchases.
According to the poll of 2,000 shoppers, 51% of customers refuse to even enter a store if there’s a long line.
To combat this issue,12% of retailers, including supermarket chain Co-operative, have begun to deploy contactless payment systems, which reduce transaction times by over a third, according to Barclays.
Brian Cunnington, head of debit cards for UK Retail Banking at Barclays, says, “The research shows that, particularly for small ticket items, consumers are no longer prepared to wait in line. They know they can go to another shop and purchase what they need more quickly. That is why many of our customers are starting to use contactless payment for goods under £15. It vastly speeds up purchases, while removing the need to fumble for the right amount of cash.”
The study also shows that the lower the value of the item, the more likely a shopper is to abandon a purchase if the queue is too long. The number of people willing to wait no more than a minute triples for lesser amounts, while the number willing to wait around 10 minutes falls dramatically for lower value purchases, according to Barclays.
Retailers currently offering contactless payment from Barclays include Co-operative supermarket, Little Chef, EAT., Subway and Pret a Manger
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| Visa, Akbank to deliver contactless m-payment to Turkey |
 Visa is teaming with Turkey’s Akbank and vendor DeviceFidelity to launch a new microSD-based contactless mobile payment system.
Akbank customers will be able to insert DeviceFidelity’s In2Pay microSD into their handsets’ memory card slots, turning them into contactless payments devices that can be used with Visa payWave terminals.
The project will initially involve Blackberry handsets, but will expand over time to include an array of devices from manufacturers including HTC, Samsung, LG, Nokia and Motorola, according to Visa.
Mary Carol Harris, head of Visa Europe’s mobile division, comments, “One of the key challenges to the success of mobile payments is the supply and availability of NFC handsets. Until a majority of mobile handsets offered in the market are supplied with integrated NFC, Visa is proactively working with innovators like DeviceFidelity and pioneers such as Akbank to harness the potential of new technologies.”
Meanwhile, Visa’s main rival MasterCard is working on a similar project with another Turkish bank, Garanti, and vendor Gemalto to deliver contactless payment to customers via NFC-enabled SIM cards
http://www.nfcnews.com/2010/08/05/visa-akbank-to-deliver-contactless-m-payment-to-turkey
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| PerSay announces biometric Apple device apps |
 PerSay, a developer of voice-based identification authentication solutions, has announced the availability of new functionality available for use on Apple devices, such as the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. The new technology, called VocalPassword, is designed to replace virtual keyboard use for filling in user names and passwords with voice-based authentication of the user.
VocalPassword is available for integration into any application offered on the Apple devices wherein any sort of personal authentication is required.
PerSay sees the technology being used in enterprise and personal applications like mobile banking, social network, payment services and membership-based clubs where login would be simplified, but security is not lost
http://www.thirdfactor.com/2010/08/04/persay-announces-biometric-apple-device-apps
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| Apple may be Implementing Biometrics |
 I keep my eye on Patently Apple for a glimpse at the future of Apple products. They serve a niche in our community, and I applaud them for that. Today, they made note a patent that Apple has purchased from three engineers from Oregon. From the description on PA, this patent covers a certain aspect of using sensors in flat panel displays. I am not a biometric or patent expert, so I would suggest that you take a look at the description yourself if you’d like the technical details. As for the patent itself, you can take a look at the image below.
I am less interested in the technical aspect than I am the possibility of this technology. Anything that could lead to better security with less hassle is something I feel we should get behind. Even if this is just a precursor to a biometric scanner on Apple products in the future, this is something we should stop, and take note of right now. What do you think? Do you think biometric scanning has a future with Apple products? Sound off in the comment section of this post to have your voice heard.

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