Company to Blanket City Streets With WiFi Connected “Smart Pavement”TOPICS:Kevin SamsonSurveillance October 18, 2015
Awareness continues to increase surrounding the health dangers of Electromagnetic Fields (EMFs) emanating from our daily gadgets, as well as from the rise of the Smart Grid. For example, a prominent neuroscientist went on record in a lecture to the medical community itself where he exposed the many health risks as well as an industry-wide attempt by telecom to cover up the negative consequences. A world-renown biochemist is seeking to abolish WiFi in schools. And a British ER physician has made it her mission to educate people about what steps they can take to minimize exposure and damage to WiFi. A slew of peer-review scientific studies support the warnings of these experts. So what happens when your entire city becomes one giant WiFi signal? Telecom giant Virgin Media has been given the green light to begin doing just that. Coverage will be enabled by “discreet street furniture” and the “UK’s first Smart Pavement.”
The pilot will begin with a focus on the center of the town of Chesham, UK where all 21,000 residents and businesses can use the network. The Chiltern District Council has joined forces and is touting the increased connectivity at massively increased speeds up to 166Mbps – 7X the average in the UK. Virgin Media’s press release cites one very happy local business owner who sees potential:
The company has high hopes that this will not be contained to one test city; rather, they make it clear that their mission is much wider in scope:
Even if you don’t believe having a permanent WiFi signal radiating across the city under your feet is a danger to your health, another aspect of pervasive WiFi may be of concern: privacy and surveillance. It is true that citizens of the UK already have become one of the most constantly surveilled on the planet, so perhaps they are becoming desensitized, but in the States it was a major news story when Seattle was discovered to have put in a secret WiFi mesh network funded by Homeland Security. The discovery led the ACLU to document the ways that residents and visitors could be spied upon while having their movements fully tracked. Although most of the outrage was directed at the secretive nature of the plan, the surveillance component is clearly present as a justified concern. There is also new WiFi tracking technology being developed that does not even need a connected device to home in on individuals or groups of people. You can read the chronicle of those developments HERE. This little device delivers turnkey Internet privacy and security (Ad)Finally, this is about more than having super-fast Internet to download your favorite movie in seconds while you wait for the bus, or to boost your business capabilities. It’s about the rise of fully connected Smart Cities that are multi-use, imposed without debate, and are very easily warped for less than noble purposes. It’s about merging the domestic “Internet of Things” with an industrial smart grid that is part of a technocracy endgame as defined by the UN’s Agenda 21. It is an all-encompassing agenda that has political support and the investment of every major tech company on the planet. It is imperative that we learn and share what this overall Smart Cities agenda entails, and reveal each piece of the superstructure that is being built in front of us. The road has now been paved…. Image Credit: Virgin Media Kevin Samson writes for ActivistPost.com and TechSwarm.com
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That is just sickening! The article says it all. The way we are going to beat this is the security issue it presents. No one cares about health or lives, but a hacking risk will perk up ears always! Another reason to be rural.
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ah! good idea!
On Oct 21, 2015, at 12:16 AM, JDark [via ES] wrote: That is just sickening! The article says it all. The way we are going to beat this is the security issue it presents. No one cares about health or lives, but a hacking risk will perk up ears always! Another reason to be rural. |
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