Although not required, chipping is socially demanding and will establish two classes of workers: those who have and those who don't. Technocrats do because they can, not because it is particularly smart. ? TN Editor
Merging electronics with genetically modified living organisms is an event that will excite Transhumans who are looking for a human cyborg reality. Tinkering with fundamentals of life itself is a dangerous proposition, but Technocrats build because t
Since the 1980's, the US has caught and imprisoned over a dozen people who were spying on American government agencies and corporations. So we catch Chinese spies once every few years. With that kind of frequency, you'd probably assume that China
Under the law that created the CIA in 1947, there was a bright line barring the agency from spying on Americans… partly over concerns about civil liberties, privacy and political abuse.
Carnegie Mellon University scientists can now use brain activation patterns to identify complex thoughts, such as, "The witness shouted during the trial."
In the past, "mind reading" systems have been able to guess what single-digit number a person might be thinking of, but deeper thoughts have been beyond the technology's reach.
"Any person who operates a motor vehicle in the state shall be deemed to have given consent to field testing of his or her mobile telephone and/or personal electronic device for the purpose of determining the use thereof while operating a motor veh
"We are rapidly entering the age of no privacy, where everyone is open to surveillance at all times; where there are no secrets from government." ? William O. Douglas, Supreme Court Justice, dissenting in Osborn v. United States, 385 U.S. 341 (
Sensitive personal details relating to almost 200 million US citizens have been accidentally exposed by a marketing firm contracted by the Republican National Committee.
In this wide-ranging exclusive interview, former intelligence analyst turned whistleblower Edward Snowden tells all. What to say to those who argue that they've got nothing to hide so nothing to fear from the intrusive ears of the state?
"They could hear you discussing your holiday plans, so they know when you are away and could burgle you. They may hear you buying something on the phone, giving away your credit card details."
Technocrats are data hoarders and will never divulge how much data they have collected, legally or illegally. The NSA and the entire intelligence network have gone rogue on the American public and have become a key element in the impending Technocrac
Such a capability would no doubt include high resolution imagers, electronic surveillance, and whatever else they can think of to investigate other countrys' spy satellites and better figure out what they are doing up there.
Human and machine connectivity are set to become ubiquitous and unavoidable, but machines are controlled by others, leading to autocratic Scientific Dictatorship. Society does not understand the grave danger that awaits it. ? TN Editor
Samsung has been busted before, but has no interest in following privacy rules or ethical behavior. This is a purely Technocrat mindset that is headed toward Scientific Dictatorship. ? TN Editor
A small revolt in corners of the Republican Party bedevils plans for reauthorization this year of surveillance capabilities considered the "crown jewels" of the U.S. intelligence community.
After the Freddie Gray riots in 2015, Baltimore residents began noticing small planes circling the city. As reporters later uncovered, Baltimore Police had quietly begun using a "wide-area surveillance" system, which deploys Cessna planes to constant
Leaked documents and public records reveal a troubling fusion of private security, public law enforcement, and corporate money in the fight over the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Ever since President George W. Bush created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the American people have become the most surveilled citizenry in the entire world. U.S. surveillance of its own citizens makes the surveillance societies of Hitler
U.S. intelligence agencies conducted illegal surveillance on American citizens over a five-year period, a practice that earned them a sharp rebuke from a secret court that called the matter a "very serious" constitutional issue.
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