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The Plan to Use Fitbit Data to Stop Mass Shootings Is Terrifying (gizmodo.com) similar stories update story
26 points by KirinDave | karma 17047 | avg karma 3.28 2019-08-30 15:43:09 | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments



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This is scary and dumb with so many false positives.

Every single instance the police were called, FBI notified, many red flags on social media yet everyone screams that THERE IS NO WAY TO STOP them. People/Police/Govt ignoring the data, while trying to push for gun control, gun confiscation etc. How about we enforce existing laws??? Murder is against the law, yet it still happens everyday. It's hard to figure out the root cause, but blaming an object is easier than trying to solve the bigger picture with mental health, social media etc. We dont blame cars when people are killed in an accident, we blame the driver. Emotional-knee jerk reactions that do not have a place in this discussion.</rant>


Cars have a purpose besides destruction. Guns don’t, and give individuals unproportionate power.

Guns primary purpose in a civilian setting isn't destruction it's intimidation.

No, guns primary purpose is entertainment.

That's interesting. In that case we should make it much harder and really expensive to get ammo. When facing a gun, you can't be sure it's not loaded, but the number of shots fired especially without specific intended targets will drop drastically.

1. That is your unthoughtful opinion not a fact. The intended purpose of a gun is destruction. That is a fact.

2. Did you notice you had to change the parameters? I was talking about the general purpose, but you didn’t like what I said and you couldn’t contradict it. So you changed the argument, but that failed too.


No country on the planet has these problems to the extent the USA has. Dont be a muppet. The only thing scary and dumb is your own myopic stupidity.

Polygraph. Phrenology. Aggression detectors. E-meters.

All designed by people in power to bamboozle gullible public into fearing some manufactured authority. Deployment of bogus tech indicates the group in power needs more compliance of some sort and lacks the public support to do so.

1. https://www.aclu.org/blog/privacy-technology/surveillance-te...

2. https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/E-Meter/


Let's see how far we can take "mental health issues". I'm pretty sure that we could make a case for every person in the world having "mental health issues". I think we can collectively agree that our society is profoundly sick; a sick society creates sick people. But "mental health" can easily be construed as a catch-all for anyone who has thoughts that do not align with the agenda of the overseers. As an aside, maybe not all mass shootings are "organic". Why do we never get a full picture of the events? Why are they "covered up"? For our safety, of course. Trust 'em! Maybe it's time that we start to take a hard look at how our smart phones and smart watches and smart homes and fitness trackers can be abused. How does anybody shrug off the implications of uploading the intimate details of your daily life to a corporate-owned, government-subpoenaed cloud (if such a subpoena is even necessary, and the data isn't simply siphoned immediately, or extracted and decrypted in-transit)? One common vision of a modern dystopia is the very real possibility of micro-chipping people, which we are already doing! We micro-chip our pets. Our credit cards, IDs, passports, which we carry with us, are micro-chipped. Our phones and our cars give up our location everywhere we go, and we're scared to turn them off, lest we miss receiving a text message immediately. Some people voluntarily microchip themselves, or are coerced into doing it by their employers. Some people have called this phenomenon the "mark of the beast". I am no scholar of religion, but that seems like a pretty salient analogy. Microchipping for reduction in health insurance premiums seems like an obvious next step.

Here's a great line from the article that sums up the moronic tone-deafness with which we treat our current climate: “Should we create a list of all men in the United States and keep tabs on them?” she said.

What? As if we do not already have this? Are we going to just act as if the intelligence agencies are not surveilling every single person, tracking phone calls, texts, emails, movements, purchases, associations? It's called "mass surveillance" for a reason. What do we think these ultra-secret spy agencies do all day with their billion-dollar budgets? Are we more content just to pretend there is no man behind the curtain, no curtain?

People want the smart homes because they're tired of raising and lowering the blinds, or having to use light switches. How on Earth are so many people content with live microphones in their homes? Can we not rise above and consider the implications in our mad pursuit of "convenience"?

We are being trained not only to accept this as our reality, but being trained to actively participate in its construction. We're being trained that it's "progress" and it's "good" because we need to be turned on to the internet at every moment in our lives. Please talk to each other in person. Turn your phone off and go outside. See what the world is becoming. Do you know any of your neighbors? Stop using these devices and "services". They will always be exploited. Governments historically institute "fear" as a matter of routine to control their subjects, and fear is synonymous with terror. Connect the dots.


"Here's a great line from the article that sums up the moronic tone-deafness with which we treat our current climate: “Should we create a list of all men in the United States and keep tabs on them?” she said.

What? As if we do not already have this? "

"Men living in the U.S., citizen and non-citizens alike, are required by law to register with Selective Service at 18 years old."

https://www.sss.gov/Home/Registration



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