>
Non compliance has always been the answer…
BOOM: Former PayPal CEO and billionaire Peter Thiel questions the legitimacy of US elections.
WEF agent openly telling you the coming digital cashless society will be regulated...
100 Times Improvement in Sight Seen After Gene Therapy Trial for Disease That Deteriorates...
Insulin-free life for diabetics closer after successful cell pouch trial
[Tesla] AI Revolution: Robot Workers, Supercomputer Demands, & Mind-Blowing Designs!
Aviation Week Believes Secret SR-72 Plane is in Production at Lockheed Martin
"Suspended animation" drug could buy time in medical emergencies
Simple technique removes over 98% of nanoplastic particles from water
We are Being Tracked on the Internet Via Our Phone Number! Zero Anonymity
What Can Solve the Huge Energy Demands of a Future with Abundant AI?
This has resulted in an international flurry of response, including UN accusations that this constitutes a war crime by Israel, as well as some publicly voiced congratulations on the ingenuity of the attack, which took place on September 17 and 18 and reportedly injured at least 2800 people and killed at least nine. However, a key ingredient is missing from the dialogue. If hand-held devices, such as walkie talkies or pagers, can be implanted with explosives and can kill targets, how safe are any of us from this mode of attack?
According to this recent article, the attack was planned by Israeli unit 8200. The article states that "The unit is famous for a work culture that emphasizes out-of-the-box thinking to tackle issues previously not encountered or imagined. This helped some graduates build Israel's high-tech sector and some of its biggest companies." The article quotes a former member of Unit 8200, Kobi Samboursky, who is now Managing Partner at Glilot Capital Partners, as saying, "The most significant thing here is the 'can-do' culture, where everything is possible."
All well and good. We want to rid the world of terrorism, right? But what does this actually signify for activists and journalists who also rely on the integrity of their hand-held devices?
Thanks to what was jumpstarted with Snowden's revelations about the extent and reach of NSA spying, and continued on with the work of EFF and others, we now know that our hand-held devices, and particularly our cell phones, are simply spy devices. We carry them around everywhere we go, and the spy devices detail not only our phone calls, but also record any ambient conversation as well as track our movements. Nevertheless, we appear to fiercely addicted to them and reluctant to abandon them to the trash receptacle. The revelation that these electronic spy devices can also be used as a vehicle of assassination may provide a much needed wake-up call.
Or maybe not.
In a 2016 sci-fi thriller, Cell, we see where the populace at large has been transformed by a cell phone signal into flesh-eating zombies. John Cusack and Samuel Jackson narrowly missed being affected by the attack and they go on to seek safety and, in the process, to kill a whole lot of the zombies. But this is just science fiction, right? The fact remains that likely frequency attacks are now being dubbed as "Havana Syndrome," which has produced debilitating effects in diplomats and intelligence officers. These attacks are now officially recognized, although the growing and numerous pleas for help from ordinary citizens, who also allege that they have been attacked with frequency weapons, remain unaddressed.