Posted on 09/16/2023 3:02:50 AM PDT by Chickensoup
I hear over and over how we are and will be controlled electronically. Smart meters running appliances, information sucked out of cars and transmitted...
So are there ways of shielding meters and cars from passing along information?
Just like there are people who change power settings on trucks with chips are there people who are designing items for protection of our privacy in consumer goods?
Or do we just cover everything in tinfoil?
So are there ways of shielding meters and cars from passing along information?
Just like there are people who change power settings on trucks with chips are there people who are designing items for protection of our privacy in consumer goods?
Or do we just cover everything in tinfoil?
Take charge of how automotive power is used,select functions you want off to conserve your battery.
If you block the information from your electric meter, you may suffer consequences. The power company may just shut you off. This is because they have no other way to read the meter other than to send out a technician and they are no longer staffed to send out a technician to read a meter. You’ll probably find there is a clause in your agreement that if you mess with the meter, you lose the meter. As for things like the “internet of things” there is no reason to have that at all. I played hell trying to get my HP printer, which I only bought to use as a scanner, not to connect. Eventually, I couldn’t use it anymore, so it went into the can. There is no reason for your refrigerator to talk to the internet. As for the car, if they pass legislation to track your mileage you can bet that if you disconnect the device that the first time you pass a reader and it doesn’t get a read, you will be targeted and pulled over because it will be tax evasion.
Incidentally, I worked for Regency Communications when they designed the first remote read power meter. I can attest that the only thing on the engineer’s mind was cutting down the manpower required by the power company to operate. Reading the meter can be dangerous as you have to get into fenced yards with dogs. Discussing this with my power company the woman told me that the amount of cheating by the self-read meters went to zero. Before it was commonplace. That meant honest people were paying the bills of dishonest people.
Interesting topic.
On cars, most all of the premium vehicles now made...have a cellphone ‘relationship’ with the car and data passes along. No cellphone? No data passing along. I expect that various ‘geeks’ will offer their services to cut the data transfer possibility, and the government will make this illegal in some way.
As for the smart-meter? Once you think about the increasing methods/ways that limited electricity will be produced, they are simply herding you to times of the day when you can run household items (freezers, washers, AC units). Adding to your burden is the E-car which has to be recharged.
Eventually, your smart-meter controllers will ask you about the type of washer/dryer, the model of your freezer unit, your E-car status, and out will come some ‘instruction’ to say that for 16 hours a day...you get limited ‘juice’ (enough to run a TV, laptop and refrigerator unit). You might have AC covered, but it’ll be at some 85-degree setting for the daytime. The smart-meter will then say you can only wash dishes or clothing after 9 PM, or charge-up your E-car.
When you start seeing washers/dryer/refrigerators with Wi-Fi connectivity....that’s the entry angle to this control. My son recently bought a washer unit which has a Wi-Fi control (it basically is prepared to be turned on, and he just sends a signal from his office to start, at a particular time).
The more ‘they’ know about you...the more control they can exert.
Weird AL was prescient.
Totally depends on the device(s)...”Smart Meters” (electricity) just report your usage (via cellular)...mess with that and the power co. disconnects you. You voluntarily sign up for the “turn off your A/C thermostat” interface device for lower “time of day” rates...don’t sign up for that. Most vehicle spying can be eliminated by not paying for the “telematics”/cellular features or by not signing up for reduced insurance rates with the OBD-II “spy device”. “Drive Safe & Save”, etc.. Auto insurance companies have been known to read your onboard OBD “black box” after an accident claim tho..
Two layers of extra-strength tinfoil, just to be sure.
Cell phone data can be easily picked up if your car is equipped w/bluetooth, where you can have your cell phone audio come out over the stereo speakers. In my car, the box providing the bluetooth is easily unplugged and is under the passenger seat.
Here’s a tinfoil hat idea...
Maybe the reason it’s so hard to get a CD player in a car anymore was to force people to use Bluetooth.
Say goodbye to AM radio: Why carmakers are removing it from new models
For starters have an off grid house and drive an old car. I was in a dealership recently looking at new vehicles....gave the sales rep the list of what I wanted my next vehicle to NOT be able to do. Told them personal privacy was the top item of importance on my list and if they couldn’t meet that no deal. I’m still waiting...but I am in no rush.
G20 Announces Plan to Impose Digital Currencies and IDs Worldwide
Epoch Times 9/12/2023 | Bryan Jung
Thousands rally in Greece as anger mounts against biometric ID cards
TRTWorld ^ | September 11, 2023
U.S. government to deploy surveillance software to detect ‘problematic sentiment and emotion’
American Thinker ^ | 3 Sep, 2023 | Eric Utter
MTA Website ‘Feature’ Lets You Track Subway Riders’ Locations
slashdot
FBI HOOVERING UP DNA AT A PACE THAT RIVALS CHINA, HOLDS 21 MILLION SAMPLES AND COUNTING
The Intercept ^ | Aug 29 2023 | Ken Klippenstein
Neighborhood Watch Out: Cops Are Incorporating Private Cameras Into Their Real-Time Surveillance Networks
Electronic Frontier Foundation ^ | 5/11/2023 | Beryl Lipton
Matt Gaetz Introduces Bill to Shut Down USPS’s Covert Spy Program
Western Journal ^ | August 18, 2023 | Warner Todd Huston
Facial recognition software blasted by DPD board of commissioners after recent false arrest
Fox 2 ^ | 8/10/2023 | Dave Kinchen and David Komer
Orwellian France: Parliament Approves Legislation Opening Door to Mass Surveillance, Making It Easier for Authorities to Spy on Electronic Devices
By Paul Serran Jul. 19, 2023
Surprise!: Mark Zuckerberg’s ‘Sanely Run’ Twitter Clone ‘Threads’ Collects All Your Data
breitbart ^ | 7/5/2023 | ALLUM BOKHARI
Report: Three major tax-prep companies sold the personal finance info of tens of millions of Americans to Meta
Not The Bee ^ | JULY 12, 2023 | Staff
Tens of millions of Americans’ private details compromised after three major tax preparation companies accused of sharing information with Google and Meta
Daily Mail ^ | 7/12/23 | Tilly Armstrong
Police will be allowed to spy on suspects by remotely activating their phones’ camera, microphone and GPS under new French laws dubbed a ‘snoopers’ charter’
UK Daily Mail ^ | 7/6/2023 | David Averre
If Amazon Thinks You’re a Racist, It Will Shut Down Your Smart Home
Front Page Magazine ^ | 13 Jun, 2023 | Daniel Greenfield
Guy gets accused of racism by his doorbell… Amazon shuts down his smart home…
Revolver ^ | June 13, 2023
Elon Musk Warns Users That Zuckerberg’s “WhatsApp” Is Secretly Accessing Device Microphones
Daily Fetched ^ | May 10, 2023 | By: Jason Walsh
Becoming China? Biden Admin Pushes Digital ID, Biotech
PJ Media ^ | 05/07/2023 | Catherine Salgado
Tesla workers shared private ‘scenes of intimacy’ filmed by car cameras: report
nypost | April 6, 2023 | Ariel Zilber
NYC’s Fairway supermarket using facial recognition to bust thieves
NY Post ^ | March 16, 2023 | Steven Vago, Dean Balsamini & Natalie O’Neill
ATF Gains Financial Information On Potential Gun Buyers For Warrantless Tracking, Documents Show
Epoch Times ^ | 03/17/2023 | Emily Miller
California County Tracked Churchgoers’ Phone Location Data To Enforce COVID Lockdowns
Daily Caller ^ | 3/9/23 | Katelynn Richardson
WikiLeaks says CIA hacked Samsung smart TVs
CBS/AP ^ | Updated on: March 8, 2017 / 11:12 AM / CBS/AP
In a trove of documents released Tuesday, WikiLeaks included code that it says shows the CIA worked with U.K. intelligence officials to turn microphones in TVs into listening devices.
So far
I'm doomed, I tell ya. Doomed.
The government can control me now.
Everything in the new car runs off Google. The infotainment system is a POS because it’s Google. I don’t log into any account so we lose a lot of so called capabilities... all data transfers and logging are turned off although it’s probably on anyway. My phone stays home 99% of the time so that’s irrelevant. Appliances are blocked from the Internet. We lose power I have a whole house generator..with WiFi that I blocked and don’t use either.
It is what it is and I block what I can.
Yep, “opt-out” is still a thing for now...looks to be going away in the more fascist future...trouble is any “tinfoil signal blocking attempts” will be discouraged in the future by penalties/jail time.
I think the removal of AM radios from cars was stopped by FEMA or similar.
I think that one starts as a money play where the younger folks prefer streaming and satellite radio. They’re simply not into, and certainly not used to, lugging around CDs, cassettes, or 8 tracks.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the car companies get a slice out of every satellite subscription sold or stream to a car.
Once such an infrastructure is in place, it’s a natural tendency for a totalitarian governments to take advantage of it for surveillance purposes.
My parents have had a HP multi function color laser printer for some time. I used HP Smart to scan their documents to the computer. Then out of the blue, HP wanted an account sign on to use the feature. I just used scan to USB. That was rather annoying.
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