I just happened upon this today. The US govt 4 days ago has awarded a company called Apiject to manufacture millions of prefilled plastic injections for a vaccine (when it comes out). If you look on this company’s website (apiject.com), there is a section that shows they can include an optional FRID tracker in the solution. They state it’s for a snapshot of where and when the vaccine is injected. It is done via an app on a phone. For those of you like me that have been accused of being a conspiracy theorist by telling people they will be able to track you with this vaccine.
Sorry, FRID = RFID
False. The RFID is on the injector. So if the time and place but it was used will be recorded.
Do you have any idea how big an RFID actually is? Its not going into a needle. And its not going into your veins.
Bkmk #17
Chip
I just happened upon this today. The US govt 4 days ago has awarded a company called Apiject to manufacture millions of prefilled plastic injections for a vaccine (when it comes out). If you look on this companys website (apiject.com), there is a section that shows they can include an optional FRID tracker in the solution. They state its for a snapshot of where and when the vaccine is injected. It is done via an app on a phone. For those of you like me that have been accused of being a conspiracy theorist by telling people they will be able to track you with this vaccine.
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Dude...you need to read things closer. The following is extracted from the site you referenced:
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.....Whether health officials are running a scheduled vaccination program or an urgent pandemic response campaign, they can make better decisions if they know when and where each injection occurs. With an optional RFID/NFC tag on each BFS prefilled syringe, ApiJect will make this possible. Before giving an injection, the healthcare worker will be able to launch a free mobile app and tap” the prefilled syringe on their phone, capturing the NFC tags unique serial number, GPS location and date/time. The app then uploads the data to a government-selected cloud database. Aggregated injection data provides health administrators an evolving real-time injection map......
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The RFID/NFC tag is not in the solution as you allege; its ON the syringe. It would no more be capable of being injected into the patient than the magazine of a 45 caliber pistol would be able to be shot into something when the trigger is pulled.
The only Bad thing I anticipate happening is some people will sit around and tap a supply of prefilled syringes against their phone to get credit for immunizations at a certain time and place. Then either throw them away or use them to immunize other (perhaps not approved) people elsewhere without recording that information via phone taps.