Dissolving Micro-Chip Will Tell Big Brother Your Every Move Chris Carrington
Activist PostJohn Rogers PhD and his team work out of the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. They, along with other teams at Tufts are developing
transient electronics, tiny micro-thin chips that dissolve when they
have served their purpose.
On April 8th this year their research paper was presented to the
American Chemical Society at their annual National meeting, this year it was held in New Orleans.
Rogers spoke eloquently of the technology, explaining its possible use
and exactly how the chips work. There was nothing negative at all in the
presentation. Nothing was mentioned about the possible negative uses of
such technology.
In a nutshell, micro-thin, soluble electronic chips
are implanted into an equally thin medium that is also soluble. The
amount of ‘wrapping’ around the chip denotes how fast it will dissolve.
Once the final encapsulation layer has dissolved, the chip,within an
hour, does the same, leaving no trace behind. There’s nothing at all to
indicate it was ever there in the first place.
Rogers said during his presentation:
<blockquote class="tr_bq">…many new opportunities open up once you start
thinking about electronics that could disappear in a controlled and
programmable way.</blockquote>Indeed they do.
The good doctor highlighted some areas he feels transient electronics
could be useful. Cell phones that cease to work at a given, pre-ordained
date when you would have to buy an updated phone. Water sensors that
would not need to be collected after submitting their data. Medical
implants that were not required for life would just fade away to save
further surgery to retrieve them.
He also briefed the audience on piezoelectric transient electronics.
These are like tiny generators that produce electricity without an
outside source, their zinc-oxide components make them work purely by
muscle power, possibly making them the pacemaker of the future.
What was not said was that these tiny electronic devices are small
enough to be injected and implanted without the recipient noticing. They
can, as Rogers admitted, be placed in cell phones at the time of
manufacture or at any point thereafter. It seems logical to assume that
they could also be put into computers, cars, flashlights or any other
object you care to think of.
How about babies? That would be relatively easy.
Children could be traced, tracked and followed from cradle to grave…how convenient.
Shoplifters could be transiently tagged so the ‘monitors’ would know if they went near forbidden stores.
Hell, we could self-destruct terrorists…or anyone else that happened to
be inconvenient if we laced the inner wrappers with cyanide. Agenda 21
made easy.
How about implanting people so if they overeat, smoke or take drugs, the
chips dissolve and eliminate the person problem? Far less people would
need medical insurance.
I think the chances of transient electronics being used purely for the
good of mankind is zero. The possibilities for this technology are huge
and extremely wide ranging and there is no reason to think that
governments won’t use it.
At the end of his presentation Rogers thanked the benefactors that had provided research grants:
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
The National Science FoundationThe Airforce Office Of Scientific ResearchThe US Department Of EnergyThe National Institute Of Biomedical Imaging and EngineeringThe National Institute Of HealthNot a lot more to say really is there?
source:-
http://www.activistpost.com/2013/06/dissolving-micro-chip-will-tell-big.html