Indeed, all over the world, similar schemes are already underway. At the same time, the establishment has been openly promoting human micro-chipping for years, with the eventual goal of having each person “chipped” and able to use the device as an ID, a credit card, and more. In 2012, the U.S. government openly announced a plan to start micro-chipping troops, supposedly for “health” purposes. Prisoners are also often cited as a potential target “market.”
End Time Believers Warn: Increasing Use Of Biometric Scanning Is Desensitizing Us Toward The Coming "Mark Of The Beast"Technology continues to advance as radio frequency identification device (RFID) chips are often used and even implanted inside of people to make life easier. Based on a new study carried out by Accenture, 89% of people in the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, and the US are willing to have fingerprint scanned to speed traveling and convenience.
ABC NEWS: People Now Are Literally "Lining Up" To Get MicrochippedFor most people, the concept of an implantable chip is either controversial or the next step of human progression. For many, they see the concept to the betterment of mankind, but for others, they see mankind’s control and submission. For the latter, one group dubbed the End Timers — or Watchmen — see it as initial technology necessary for the “Mark of the Beast.”
Warming Up To The Mark Of The Beast: New Polls Confirm People Ready For Biometric ID If It Makes Lives Easier
For technologies that were once considered creepy, the public is making concessions: Most people are willing to share biometric information with government agencies if it would in some way improve their travel experience, according to a survey released June 24 by Accenture. More specifically, of the 3,000 respondents in six countries (the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Japan and Australia), 87 percent agreed to such use with varying degrees of confidence. These results were startling, said Mark Crego, managing director for Accenture Border and Identity Services, adding that people are especially willing to share biometric information when it comes to improving security. “It seems there’s been a huge change in public opinion and that people are much more willing to use biometrics as they have in the past," he said, "particularly if they can feel...
For technologies that were once considered creepy, the public is making concessions: Most people are willing to share biometric information with government agencies if it would in some way improve their travel experience, according to a survey released June 24 by Accenture. More specifically, of the 3,000 respondents in six countries (the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Japan and Australia), 87 percent agreed to such use with varying degrees of confidence. These results were startling, said Mark Crego, managing director for Accenture Border and Identity Services, adding that people are especially willing to share biometric information when it comes to improving security. “It seems there’s been a huge change in public opinion and that people are much more willing to use biometrics as they have in the past," he said, "particularly if they can feel...
Preparing You For HIS Arrival With New Digital Tattoo: “E-Skin” Beast-Tech Begins Its Commercial Offerings
Regina Dugan, the former DARPA head, and leading special projects for the Google-owned Motorola, showed electronic tattoos as one password authentication sign of the future. The idea of a password authentication tool in the form of a wearable tattoo was quite novel but welcomed by a wider audience of techies and mobile phone users looking forward to better, more reliable and easier ways of logging into mobile devices. The idea this week has ripened considerably with Thursday's introduction by VivaLnk, a Santa Clara, California-based company, of Digital Tattoo, developed with Google's Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) group. As for the sync, according to the announcement, "Simply tap the back of Moto X to your Digital Tattoo and follow the onscreen instructions. For the first activation, you will be prompted to re-enter your existing PIN and to set a master PIN. For the remaining activations of the same tattoo you pair the tattoo and tap to activate." Digital Tattoo designed to communicate with a phone is an application of the company's eSkin wearable technology but it is the first commercialized product of its kind. According to the company the VivaLnk team is looking to expand to other devices and future versions utilizing eSkin technology in identification security and numerous other fields…
Regina Dugan, the former DARPA head, and leading special projects for the Google-owned Motorola, showed electronic tattoos as one password authentication sign of the future. The idea of a password authentication tool in the form of a wearable tattoo was quite novel but welcomed by a wider audience of techies and mobile phone users looking forward to better, more reliable and easier ways of logging into mobile devices. The idea this week has ripened considerably with Thursday's introduction by VivaLnk, a Santa Clara, California-based company, of Digital Tattoo, developed with Google's Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) group. As for the sync, according to the announcement, "Simply tap the back of Moto X to your Digital Tattoo and follow the onscreen instructions. For the first activation, you will be prompted to re-enter your existing PIN and to set a master PIN. For the remaining activations of the same tattoo you pair the tattoo and tap to activate." Digital Tattoo designed to communicate with a phone is an application of the company's eSkin wearable technology but it is the first commercialized product of its kind. According to the company the VivaLnk team is looking to expand to other devices and future versions utilizing eSkin technology in identification security and numerous other fields…
New Book "Beast Tech" Outlines Where E-Skin Tech Started & Where It's GoingThree months later, in May, the Massachusetts-based engineering firm MC10 disclosed that it is developing a high-tech, biostamp, electronic “tattoo” that will replace all passwords. It is made of silicon and is sealed on the wearer’s body. MC10 hopes to have its first prototypes “affixed” to humans with the next few months. .. No sooner had Motorola announced its plan for the “Proteus” swallowable marker than some in the secular media marched forward to brand any concerned or resistant religious types as inflexible shrills who do not represent true Christianity. As an example, Iain Thomson of The Register wrote on May 31, 2013...
John Rutherford Challenge Of Oklahoma’s Mandatory Biometric Requirements Raises Subtle Question Of 'Mark Of The Beast'
The Rutherford Institute has asked a state court to safeguard the religious freedom rights of an Oklahoma resident who objects to a requirement by the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety that in order to acquire a drivers’ license, residents must submit to a biometric photograph, which is then stored in a database managed and accessed by international organizations. “Whatever one’s belief systems—whether a person views a biometric ID card in the form of a driver’s license or other government-issued form of identification as the Mark of the Beast or merely the long arm of Big Brother, the outcome remains the same—ultimate control by the government,” said John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute ...
The Rutherford Institute has asked a state court to safeguard the religious freedom rights of an Oklahoma resident who objects to a requirement by the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety that in order to acquire a drivers’ license, residents must submit to a biometric photograph, which is then stored in a database managed and accessed by international organizations. “Whatever one’s belief systems—whether a person views a biometric ID card in the form of a driver’s license or other government-issued form of identification as the Mark of the Beast or merely the long arm of Big Brother, the outcome remains the same—ultimate control by the government,” said John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute
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