To: berserker
512 bits is enough info to encode a unique number to identify you.
Worth alot of effort to those who want to know what you do so they can target marketing to you.
Or, alternatly, spy on you.
Literally.
15 posted on
03/13/2003 11:05:46 AM PST by
Darksheare
(Quickly flip the switch and watch the pretty colors, of the pyrotechnics of my heart exploding.)
To: Darksheare
Exactly how does the chip know who I am just because I walked into a drug store and bought a can of shaving cream?
33 posted on
03/13/2003 11:21:03 AM PST by
blau993
(Labs for love; .357 for Security.)
To: Darksheare; berserker
512 bits is enough info to encode a unique number to identify you.
I'm with DS. Even if its bytes not bit - 64 alphanumeric digits is enough to catalogue every human who has ever lived and then onto a few million more years. I've forgotten more than I ever knew at math but I'm pretty sure that 26 letters and 0-9 digits interspersed gives you a unique ID that will never "run out".
Once you're ID'd you have a space in their database.
108 posted on
03/13/2003 4:54:20 PM PST by
Tunehead54
(Support our troops!)
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