Remember when you were a kid and you tried to imagine what the world was going to look like in the far-off, sci-fi-sounding year of 2021? What did you imagine? Weekend trips to the moon? Flying cars and jetpacks to take you around elevated cities? Robot butlers? The end of all diseases? Star Trek-style replicators and holodecks?
Well, snap out of it, kid. This is what 2021 really looks like:
In case you didn’t know, that’s the handy-dandy contactless facial recognition gate from NEC. Yes, you don’t have to worry about fiddling with your mask to allow your algorithmic overlord to scan your face and allow you entry to a building, terminal or security perimeter anymore! Thanks to the good folks at NEC, you can now maintain your social distancing and be electronically tracked and herded like the pliable tax cattle you are without even taking your mask off!
“But what about those poor souls living in third world nations?” I hear you asking. Never fear! Thanks to the non-profit Simprints Technology (in partnership with Gavi, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, USAid and other benevolent philanthropic institutions), there are contactless biometric scanners for them, too! Simprints’ biometric solution allows governments to more effectively tag and track their human property, issue them an electronic brand, and make sure they get processed through the system all without having to come within six feet of another human being!
And just in case you’re upset that you’re missing out on the fun, you can rest assured that some version of biometric ID is going to be rolled out in your local area in the very near future . . . all to keep you safe from the deadly bogeyvirus, of course. (Did someone say COVID passport?)
But there’s just one little thing to consider in this headlong rush to get the entirety of the human species’ biometric details entered into the computer matrix: biometric systems are notoriously buggy, hackable and open to spoofing. But why let a little identity theft get in the way of the New Biometric Normal, eh?
Still, for those who insist, here’s a breakdown of just five of the ways that this biometric scanning technology can be hacked, gamed, spoofed or tricked.
Are you concerned about these biometric ID systems that are popping up around the world right now? Well, you should be, and it’s not just because of their security flaws. Find out more in this week’s edition of The Corbett Report Subscriber.
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vol 11 issue 04 (February 14, 2021)
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by James Corbett Remember when you were a kid and you tried to imagine what the world was going to look like in the far-off, sci-fi-sounding year of 2021? What did you imagine? Weekend trips to the moon? Flying cars and jetpacks to take you around elevated cities? Robot butlers? The end of all diseases? Star Trek-style replicators and holodecks? Well, snap out of it, kid. This is what 2021 really looks like: In case you didn’t know, that’s the handy-dandy contactless facial recognition gate from NEC. Yes, you don’t have to worry about fiddling with your mask to allow your algorithmic overlord to scan your face and allow you entry to a building, terminal or security perimeter anymore! Thanks to the good folks at NEC, you can now maintain your social distancing and be electronically tracked and herded like the pliable tax cattle you are without even taking your mask off! “But what about those poor souls living in third world nations?” I hear you asking. Never fear! Thanks to the non-profit Simprints Technology (in partnership with Gavi, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, USAid and other benevolent philanthropic institutions), there are contactless biometric scanners for them, too! Simprints’ biometric solution allows governments to more effectively tag and track their human property, issue them an electronic brand, and make sure they get processed through the system all without having to come within six feet of another human being! And just in case you’re upset that you’re missing out on the fun, you can rest assured that some version of biometric ID is going to be rolled out in your local area in the very near future . . . all to keep you safe from the deadly bogeyvirus, of course. (Did someone say COVID passport?) But there’s just one little thing to consider in this headlong rush to get the entirety of the human species’ biometric details entered into the computer matrix: biometric systems are notoriously buggy, hackable and open to spoofing. But why let a little identity theft get in the way of the New Biometric Normal, eh? Still, for those who insist, here’s a breakdown of just five of the ways that this biometric scanning technology can be hacked, gamed, spoofed or tricked. 1. Forging FingerprintsYour fingerprint. As unique as a snowflake, those swirls and whorls on the ends of your fingerprints are—as we all know from any number of detective stories or crime procedurals—perfect for identifying you at the scene of a crime. But did you know that before they became a staple piece of evidence for the Scotland Yard types, the study of fingerprints was systematized by Charles Galton, the father of eugenics? It should hardly be surprising, then, that fingerprints were the first thing that the boffins turned to in their quest to create a biometric identification system. In 2021, we are already well past the point where fingerprint scanning is considered some sort of futuristic, sci-fi way of gaining access to a system. Indeed, with the advent of TouchID, many people around the world now routinely use their fingerprint as their password. But as long as there have been fingerprint ID systems, there have been warnings that such systems are easily spoofed. Like in 2002, when Japanese researchers used gummy bear gelatine to mould fake fingers that could fool fingerprint detectors 80% of the time. By 2005, researchers in the US had increased that false fingerprint verification rate to 90% using dental materials, Play-Doh and severed cadaver fingers. Think the fingerprint scanner makers could make an easy workaround to such crude spoofs? Think again. In 2016, a journalist was able to use the same dental mold and Play-Doh trick to hack into an iPhone in five minutes. In fact, he assures us it would’ve taken even less time if he had had a public photo of the hand in question. That’s no exaggeration, either. In 2014 a hacker used a photo taken of German defense minister Ursula von der Leyen at a press conference to clone her fingerprint. Still think fingerprint identification is a good idea? Ok, how about facial recognition . . . 2. Faking FacesUsing a face scan to “unlock” a digital system may sound just as plausible as using a fingerprint. After all, everyone has a unique face, right? Well, no. Actually, even a second’s thought might bring up some interesting exceptions to that rule. What about identical twins? Surely the identical twin of a facial ID system’s user could fool that system into granting the twin access, right? As it turns out, yes, most of the time twins can fool the system. But in a strange way it brings even less comfort to know that sometimes (but only sometimes) the twins can’t gain access to each other’s devices with their identical faces. But if you think that’s bad, get a load of this. In 2017, Apple refunded one Chinese woman’s iPhoneX purchase when it was found that her coworker (not her identical twin) could unlock her phone with her (the coworker’s) face. This may be part of the well-documented phenomenon that facial recognition technologies have a harder time distinguishing non-white faces, leading to many false verifications. Of course, it’s not just poor recognition algorithms that one has to worry about with facial recognition. Just like with forged fingerprints, hackers have found ways to fool face scanners into approving access for fake faces. One demonstration of this involved cybersecurity firm Bkav showing that they could fool the iPhone’s FaceID system with a $150 mask made with a combination of 3D printing, a silicone nose and printed images of the eyes. 3. Imitating IrisesOK, what about iris scans? You’ve seen it used in a million pieces of sci-fi predictive programming over the years. The scientist steps up to the locked door of the high-tech laboratory, a beam of light scans his eyeball, and voila! The door is open. Yeah, that’s a bunch of hooey, too. Less than a month after Samsung launched its Galaxy 8 smartphone, hackers had already figured out how to foil its iris recognition feature using nothing more than a camera, a laser printer and a contact lens. Still, the fact that the feature even lasted a month before it was broken might be to its credit; the facial recognition feature was defeated before the phones even shipped. 4. Hacking HashesBut what about those lazy hackers out there? What if you just don’t want to go through the rigamarole of creating fake fingerprints or imitation irises? Or what if you’re out of Play-Doh and Gummy Bears? Don’t worry, there’s an easier way: hacking. Why bother trying to fool the scanner when you can just hack into it? And if you can hack into a biometric database then you can acquire not just one set of biometric credentials, but millions. Or billions. Think that’s an exaggeration? Just look at Aadhaar. As you know by now, Aadhaar is the world’s largest biometric identification scheme, having collected a digital photograph, ten fingerprints, and iris scans of over one billion Indians in the past several years. As you also know, it enjoys the vocal support of Bill Gates (of course) and was pioneered by Gates’ friend, philanthropic partner and “hero,” Nandan Nilekani. What you may not know is that the software used to enroll new users into the Aadhaar database was compromised years ago. A software patch that was available for purchase for 2,500 Indian rupees (about $34) could override the system’s security features, allowing unauthorized users to add accounts for anyone, generating unique identification numbers that could then be used to access Indian government services. As the more in-depth reports on the hacks elaborated, it was being widely used by operators to increase their margins on enrolling new users by allowing them to log in to several machines simultaneously. The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) that operates the Aadhaar scheme was quick to downplay reports that anyone’s biometric details had been compromised. The patch only allowed hackers to add accounts, not read accounts. See? Nothing to worry about! Continue giving your fingerprints with your tax returns. Have your 12-digit biometrically-issued ID number ready when you get your vaccine. Open your eyes nice and wide for the iris scan before you get your government rations. I mean, it’s not like your personal details could ever be breached by a biometric database hack, right? 5. Bypassing BiometricsYes, you could go to great lengths to construct fake fingerprints or irises or other elaborate ruses to fool the biometric scanners. Or you could try to hack into the biometric databases themselves to steal people’s identity. But there’s an even more direct route for the would-be hacker who is a little lazy: routing around the scanner altogether. In a lame attempt to downplay the iris scanner hack referred to in section 3 above, Securlinx ends up making a good point: it’s much easier to bypass a system than it is to enact an elaborate scheme for tricking a scanner.
They’re not wrong. Getting into a system can sometimes be a lot easier than the elaborate Mission Impossible-style spy stuff outlined above. After all, we’re told it was a simple phishing attempt that got Podesta’s emails. Sometimes all you need to rely on is the stupidity of the average person. ConclusionYes, biometric systems are notoriously spoofable, hackable and breachable. And the worst part is that, unlike a run-of-the-mill password, once your face or iris or fingerprints get hacked there’s nothing you can ever do to change them. But in pointing out the inherent lack of security in these biometric systems, we run the risk of falling into a trap. We might be seen to be implicitly stating that if these security loopholes could be closed then biometric identification would be a good thing. But that is not the point. These systems are being put into place to tag, track and database the human population just like a rancher keeps tabs on his cattle, and for much the same reason. To the politicians who administer the system for the technocrats who manage the system for the banksters who create the system, we are merely tax cattle to be penned, herded, fattened, sheared, and, when need be, slaughtered. The biometric ID is just a more efficient way to facilitate that purpose. It starts off small. It’s just a TouchID scanner on your “smart”phone. It’s just a fingerprint for your passport. It’s just a face scan at the airport. It’s just a digital photo for your Real ID. It’s just a biometric scan to pay for your groceries. . . . Once the countours of the biometric prison planet come into view, it’s already too late. The bars have been slammed shut and the door locked. But don’t worry. If you get your biometric driver’s license and government ID and tie it into your vaccination record and social credit score then maybe they’ll let you have your dream of flying cars after all. To the future! |
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Hi!
On friday, i went to a shop to buy a 6 pack of beer. I thougth it would the fastest way, to use a shop bot / scanning machine, for payment.
Well, it was in a way, util i had to prove that i was over 18 years old.
The bot, ” asked ” me to give a finger print, and get an asistant to aprove of my adultness. So the next time i want to buy beer, i just have to let the bot scan my finger print, and eweryting will be ok.
End off story, i got my beer’s and i did not give the bot / corp, my finger scan. But i think i soon must ( if i want to use the shop at all ), the bots are taking over almost every shop here in norway. So the future is here, yes James.
Roy
Brew your own beer. It’s cheaper too….
Do you brew your own beer ?
I have done that for 20 years, in norway it is called homebrew, and is made of malt, sugger, and yeast + water ! It tastes really good if you do it the right way, and it gets really strong too, and it grows a lot of beard in your face, for some reasons ( on me at least ). So if you do , keep up the good tradition. If not, try it !
I normally brew about 25 Liters, when i am at it. Takes about 14 days, before i start drinking from it. Normally i throw a party, and all of it is gone, pretty soon.
Roy
Sounds like your batch is insufficiently voluminous, Roy. You should bump it up to 50 liters.
More from me !
“Yes, biometric systems are notoriously hackable, spoofable and breachable. And the worst part is that, unlike a run-of-the-mill password, once your face or iris or fingerprints get hacked there’s nothing you can ever do to change them.
But in pointing out the inherent lack of security in these biometric systems, we run the risk of falling into a trap. We might be seen to be implicitly stating that if these security loopholes could be closed then biometric identification would be a good thing. But that is not the point.”
I can smell, a govornment blockchain idetification a long way here.
Your identity, wil go there, and stay there. I think, you soon wil find me, and my whole life in a small cube / block, traded, on the cyber stock excange.
Roy
On which page is Griffins’s webiste for you? On my end, it’s on the top of the third page.
https://www.google.com/search?q=red+pill+university
First on duckduckgo.
Welcome to THE UPSIDE DOWN!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7C3Dk-0ayak
Oh!
WhatsHerFace !
I needed that!
That Canadian gal can really throw out some wit.
(The background music really gave the poem some feel.)
James – thank you for the link “The Great Firewall of…America? WTZ!”
Highly recommended.
I would speculate that this technique could also be used against Bitcoin.
I was captivated by that presentation!
And most of it was Greek to me, but I sure caught the highlight.
Rob Braxman mentions February 2nd (Tuesday) as the start date.
For me, this date rings a bell.
Very, very early that morning of Feb 2nd, prior to U.S. market open, silver prices crashed.
This was during the days of the “Silver Short Squeeze”, and silver prices on Monday had almost touched $30 an ounce.
Over the previous weekend (Saturday and Sunday), people had bought up huge amounts of physical silver inventory. Monday, silver shot up.
On Tuesday Feb 2nd, silver prices on the COMEX slid way down, crashing hard.
During this period of time, there were also the Reddit WallStreetBets events of GameStop, AMC, etc.
Another odd thing was that Brokerages were somewhat “throttled” on different days. Sometimes, trades could not be placed. Zero Hedge had some articles about the brokerages.
It doesn’t sound like this is connected to the VPN scenario, but I am just noting the time period coincidence.
You may be on to something, but I guess we will never know. FWIW I was placing trades on Silver miners during that period with no issues at all – some Twitter buddies did report problems they were having.
I took the Firewall presentation to describe a greater threat than just to VPN’s. Many Crypto fans think they are immune from government inteference. This lays out a framework where such confidence is totally misplaced IMHO.
This from 2018 describes the framework in better detail
https://theintercept.com/2018/06/25/att-internet-nsa-spy-hubs/
combined with this for BTC in particular
https://medium.com/@raimondi_18761
Great stuff. I am thinking that fake passports will become the rage in the coming months!! A good business opportunity? You bet. Many have already started. #walkaway!
Coming Soon: The ‘Vaccine Passport’ – The New York Times
February 4, 2021
https://archive.is/3W2po
EXCERPTS:
Among governments and those in the travel industry, a new term has entered the vocabulary: vaccine passport.
One of President Biden’s executive orders aimed at curbing the pandemic asks government agencies to “assess the feasibility” of linking coronavirus vaccine certificates with other vaccination documents, and producing digital versions of them.
[…] It isn’t just governments that are suggesting vaccine passports. In a few weeks, Etihad Airways and Emirates will start using a digital travel pass, developed by the International Air Transport Association, to help passengers manage their travel plans and provide airlines and governments documentation that they have been vaccinated or tested for Covid-19.
[…] In addition to I.A.T.A., IBM has been developing its own Digital Health Pass that would enable individuals to present proof of vaccination or a negative test to gain access to a public location, such as a sports stadium, airplane, university or workplace. The pass, built on IBM’s blockchain technology, can utilize multiple data types, including temperature checks, virus exposure notifications, test results and vaccine status. The World Economic Forum and the Commons Project Foundation, a Swiss nonprofit group, have been testing a digital health passport called CommonPass, which would allow travelers to access testing or vaccination information. The pass would generate a QR code that could be shown to authorities.
And I forgot the money quote:
Why would I need a vaccine pass or passport?
As more people are inoculated, there will likely be aspects of public life in which only people who have been vaccinated are allowed to participate.
Zero Hedge – Monday Feb 15, 2021
Bill Gates Goes Full Captain Planet, Wants To Change ‘Every Aspect Of Economy’ While We Dine On Fake Meat
EMBEDDED VIDEO – “60 Minutes” Bill Gates interview –
Worth watching, but rated SIS (scary insane shit)
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/bill-gates-goes-full-captain-planet-wants-change-every-aspect-economy-while-we-dine-fake
A few EXCERPTS
Microsoft founder Bill Gates is pushing drastic and ‘fundamental’ changes to the economy in order to immediately halt the release of greenhouse gasses – primarily carbon dioxide – and ‘go to zero’ in order to save the planet from long-prognosticated (and consistently wrong) environmental disaster.
Changes we’ll need to make in order to realize Gates’ vision include:
~~ Allocating $35 billion per year on climate and clean energy research.
~~ Electric everything.
~~ Widespread consumption of fake meat, since cows account for ‘4% of all greenhouse gases.’
~~ Retooling the steel and cement industries, which Gates says account for 16% of all carbon dioxide emissions, to inject up to 30% of captured C02 into concrete, and create a different type of steel.
~~ Widespread adoption of next generation nuclear energy to supplement wind and solar…
…Bill Gates has been lauded as the man to “save the world” and help the planet reach zero carbon emissions in a new report by Wired Magazine, despite such standards not being reflected in the billionaire philanthropist’s own lifestyle.
The article investigates how Gates plans to achieve a “zero carbon” world and promotes his new book which argues “it’s time we make real societal, economic and logistic changes to our way of life to avoid disaster.”….
Hi Alvin !
Why fake something fake ?
I would think, that these PCR test’s would be available to get for your self at the free marked.
There should be a free marked laboratorium, that would be able to analyse this test, at lets say, 10 times amplifying, not the 30-50 as used in the state labs. So this could be a way to get a legitim certificate of the fake test ! Not going to be free ( as free from the government ), but maybe a legal way to get what you want ? In the US, there are plenty of private labs, as i understand, why not talk to them ? And please post the answer here !
Roy
The first defense for me is as always look for the degrees of freedom – they are always there. And the more so in your private life. When you concentrate too much on the obstacles, all you start seeing are the obstacles. Like there is nothing else anymore. But there is, there is plenty “else” even.
Why? Well, simply, because the mind of the authorities and the rich and powerful is pretty limited. Their vision of the future is very mundane and superficial. Their visions cannot match reality. Their idea of superiority is just as stupid as thinking the human race is somehow the pinnacle of evolution. That popular insane idea is just another proof of elitist dreaming outside reality. Their impressive powerful totalitarian Titanics are doomed to sink.
So, to be honest, actually I just do nothing but evade and duck and look for loopholes and degrees of freedom. They are always there.
OK, that’s my first line of defense. It works for me. Looking around me, seeing the worry of relatives and friends and neighbors, I know that’s not enough. So you try to help them and inform them as long as they are open to it.
But then, for a lot of people real freedom is scary. For them freedom equals chaos and uncertainty. In a limited sense that is true. No freedom without risks. But again, concentrating on the negatives makes you see mainly them. It is about the opportunities that come with freedom. To be able to deal with risks and opportunities is an art. Clearly it is not for everyone.
So I accept it, that for a lot of people, the way it goes maybe is the best for them. Surviving in the safety of the herd. In the end, I am also to a certain degree a social animal. I wouldn’t be writing this comment, now would I?
It is therefore not my aim to change the world and politics into some perfect global libertarian anarchy of sorts. My aim is to find my way in this totalitarian-by-design labyrinth. Kind of like a life philosophy, a sporting challenge even. To be fair, maybe I would miss this challenge if it wouldn’t be there?
A memory pops up. At one time as a student I lived in the periphery of Amsterdam. Going to college in the city center I tried to evade the traffic lights and jams as much as possible. And amazingly, indeed there was a way to the very center without these traffic lights, and very fast even. You just had to pick your own route and be a bit inventive.
Thanks for the video Why Distributed Networks Are Important.
Distributed networks are fine and necessary, there is just a big caveat, they use the same physical infrastructure.
To understand how internet works one has to understand OSI model.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSI_model
Distributed networks are defined on level 3 in the OSI model, they are really just abstractions. They don’t change anything on a material level, first layer in OSI model stays the same and they own it. Internet passports are not inconceivable today when bio-passports are almost here.
I have no doubt loopholes will always exists, but for average joe not without help from some techy. I’m really interested are there any proposals about how this knowledge could be distributed continuously, because that would be an arms race situation. But internet is just too big haystack, they will never be able to control it.
I feel as if an elephant is sitting on my chest. I can’t breathe. Everywhere I look I see people dutifully donning their oxygen depravation system,s trudging along buying their toilet paper.
I am the only one not wearing a mask. People stare at me as if I am the freak.
I really have lost hope. I wish I weren’t alone here in eastern PA. I am in a Twilight Zone episode, I just know it.
You are not alone in “standing alone”.
For months and months, when I enter a store like Walmart or my local grocery stores, I am surrounded by everybody wearing a mask. Everyone has a mask on, except an occasional small child.
I am the only person not wearing a mask.
I look. I actively look for someone else who isn’t wearing a mask. I can’t find anyone. There are hundreds and hundreds of people in the store.
Occasionally, I will get a glare from someone who resents it.
I see a lot of “double-take surprised glances” come my way.
I’m used to being alone on this.
I’m fine.
I’m not lonely, just alone in my one person demonstration of personal liberty.
Crowd support is not something I need. I like it, but don’t need it.
However, there is my corner neighborhood convenience store / liquor store. The guy behind the counter doesn’t wear a mask, even though it is a County mandate for businesses. And often, other customers come in without a mask. So, that is kind of cool.
If everyone is wearing a mask, I guess that makes it OK for that one single guy/gal not to wear it. Everyone’s protected, so no harm, no foul.
This reminds me of my gallivanting around during the past spring. I could walk in the outdoors for two hours without seeing more than a handful of people, usually the same faces from previous treks. While I found this experience quite uncomfortable, there was also solace in knowing that everyone was safe. Because, if everyone was shuttering in place inside, it was perfectly safe for me to shutter in place in the outside.
This spring, it doesn’t look like people are planning to stay indoors for extended spells, there’s quite a lot of ongoers with the onset of nice weather. This is probably a combined effect of the spell wearing a bit thin and the fact there was a sharp turn in propaganda where people are less conditioned to stay inside while there’s more pressure on business to stay closed.
Recently, there has been many spilling of beans all over the place.
In my failing EU member state, the prime minister recently engaged in open war with the media, putting the onus on them to do whatever needs to be done to push the vaccines. Literal finger pointing in front of cameras was the method used. The media didn’t go into frenzy over that incredible breach and the public seems to have been left utterly unimpressed as well.
Just the other day, the same prime minister (whom to me seems as if he has considerably diminished health recently) has engaged in open warfare with some local medical officials. One of the public health institutions chiefs has caught wind of the Astra zeneca (is it AZ?) being disallowed for older than 55 (or somewhere along those lines) in many countries in Europe and across the world so has proclaimed that this same policy is to be followed in his locale.
The official stance (fully enforced by the media) here is that that vaccine is absolutely safe for everyone and his excellency the prime minister took to telling off that pesky local official, claiming that laws will need to be updated to prevent anyone on the local level from countering the centralized narrative. He didn’t even try to use double speak, he was very frank in his outpour. I wasn’t very surprised to see this information going below the radar for the vast majority, even if it probably can’t get any more obvious than that.
There has recently also been some talk about lessening the restrictions in some regions, but again centralized gatekeepers took to castigating, shaming and telling off the peasantry. Even though, not that long ago, regional “experts” were allowed to adjust restrictions in their locale. Now the central committee claims that locals can only opt for stricter “measures.”
I’m quite afraid none of these people have any idea what 1984 is about, let alone having read it.