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Netters
With all the good intentions that this chip is
being marketed, with all the crap of senior citizens and kids being safe for we
can locate them using the GPS. Remember one piece of information that no one is
telling you today. One day a dictatorial government will get its hand on this
technology, a government with Gestapo's department like Internal Security,
and you do not know what they will do with you who has this chip. But this is
what scares the living out of me, one of these days we will stop to manufacture
bullets, for if any one has a problem with you he/she will just stop that chip
and he/she will shut you down. Hey what about sending on that chip a message or
a virus to mess you up? All these are possibilities with technology. I hope we
open up our minds when we get these new things and do not merely look at them in
the small mindedness they are presented to us.
Em
FDA Approves Implantable Chip Sales In
Humans By Julia Scheeres
Wired.com
10-24-2
- A surprise decision by the Food and Drug
Administration permits the use of implantable ID chips in humans,
despite an FDA investigator's recent public reservations about the
devices.
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- The FDA sent chip manufacturer Applied Digital
Solutions a letter stating that the agency would not regulate the
VeriChip if it was used for "security, financial and personal
identification or safety applications," ADS said Tuesday.
-
- But the FDA has not determined whether the
controversial chip can be used for medical purposes, including linking
to medical databases, the company added. In the United States, ADS has
principally marketed VeriChip as a life-saving tool, saying, for
example, that unconscious patients brought to emergency rooms could be
scanned to determine their medical histories.
-
- Repeated phone calls to the FDA's press office were
not returned Tuesday, and ADS refused to provide the media with a copy
of the agency's letter.
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- The decision comes five months after ADS made
international headlines by implanting three members of a Florida family
with the VeriChip, which is slightly larger than a grain of rice and
emits a 125-kilohertz radio frequency signal that can be picked up by a
scanner up to four feet away.
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- In an interview earlier this month, FDA investigator
Wally Pellerite said he was unaware of any implantable device that was
not regulated by the FDA. Cosmetic implants -� including breast and
penile enhancers -� undergo a rigorous FDA examination to determine
their effect on the human body despite having no medical
function.
-
- Although ID chips have been used in animals for years,
they may have "inherent risks" when used in humans, Pellerite said in
the interview.
-
- On Tuesday, Pellerite referred questions to the FDA
press office.
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- "At this point, I can't say anything other than to
represent what the official agency opinion is in this matter," he wrote
in an e-mail. "Previously I was free to give you both sides of the
argument and to point out the pros and cons to each. I am no longer free
to do that."
-
- Applied Digital Solutions has gotten into hot water in
the past for issuing conflicting statements to the media and to the FDA
about the VeriChip's intended use. In May, the FDA launched an
investigation into the VeriChip when the company repeatedly referred to
the chip as a medical lifesaver in the media, yet assured officials it
was merely an identification device.
-
- Tuesday's press release was also confusing, with ADS
repeatedly referring to VeriChip as a medical device despite the fact
that the FDA has not ruled whether the chip may be used for health
purposes.
-
- ADS president Scott Silverman did not comment on the
release, but said he was pleased with the FDA's decision.
-
- "We'll now go into high gear with our sales, marketing
and distribution plans in the U.S.," he said, adding that the company
would be focusing on the security and ID aspects of the
microchip.
-
- Silverman said security applications could include
using the chip to control access to sensitive structures such as nuclear
power plants, government buildings or private businesses. An example of
an ID application could include "chipping" an Alzheimer's patient who
suffers memory loss and wanders away from home, he added.
-
- Richard Smith, a privacy expert who
<http://www.computerbytesman.com/>follows the VeriChip, suggested
the device should have been subjected to a full FDA review to determine
its safety.
-
- "Does ADS have any data for complications of VeriChips
being installed in animals?" Smith asked. "Are there ever infection
problems or autoimmune rejections? Since the FDA has chosen to not test
the device, the next best thing is to try to understand if there have
been health-related problems in animals."
-
- Meanwhile, Leslie Jacobs, the matriarch of the Florida
family chipped in May, said she hoped the FDA would approve the VeriChip
for medical use. Both her husband and son experience ongoing health
problems.
-
- "People who need this should be able to elect to have
it," she said. "The VeriChip could help saves lives."
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- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,55952,00.html
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The Mulindwas
communication group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
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