Friday, May 15, 2009

Privacy...or not

The technology behind Ontario's new enhanced driver's licences will allow people to secretly track other people's activities and movements unless privacy protection is added. The radio frequency identity (RFID) tag that will be embedded into the card can be read not only by authorized readers, but just as easily by unauthorized readers. There is a request to include an on-off switch that will provide better privacy protection with the new licences, which are scheduled to start rolling out June 1. On that date, the U.S. will start requiring a passport for all Canadian visitors entering the country at land crossings without an enhanced driver's licence.
The RFID microchip inside the licence contains only a unique identification number and no other information. The licence will come with a sleeve that will protect it from being read. However, people are often required to use their licences away from the border and most drivers will abandon the use of the protective sleeve.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

H1N1 handmade

Suspicions that the virus is a result of genetic engineering were raised by Adrian Gibbs, a scientist from Australia who was a part of the team that created Tamiflu, medicine for the swine flu. Gibbs points out it is possible that the virus was created during experiments conducted by scientists in order to create viruses and vaccination for them. The virus and its behaviour were supposedly observed in eggs.
The theory of the virus “escaping” a laboratory was justified due to facts that the virus had mutated and spread outside the laboratory at great speed!

The Earliest Michelangelo's Work