ya claro
"mi novia no es una fruta..
me lo ha dicho ella...."
"la CIA no me hecspia...
me lo ha dicho ella...."
en fin....
te lo estan diciendo ya de forma oficial / semioficial que esta hecho para espiar y sacar bases de datos con fines ocultos y poco claros
pero si no se respeta algo tan basico a nivel de consumo con la inclusion en bases de datos para telermaketing y tienes telefonos que llaman varias veces todas las semanas solo para molestar y colgar
o para venderte productos que ya tienes
o para nadie sabe que..
y no hay organismo publico que lo controle o detenga
dime tu quien va a regular o controlar los datos geneticos que acabas de entregar por candidez...
que esta muy bien, mejor se "candido" que un hijomio ya quemado, por que se puede pasar a ser "candido" + "informado consciente y que no se deje tomar el pelo"
en cambio hijomio amargado y mala persona cuesta mas de remontar luego (estilo lo que estamos viendo en el EXPEDIENTE ROYUELA
....
pues es eso
BASICAMENTE LE ACABAS DE DAR TU PERFIL GENETICO
A TRAMAS SECRETAS IGUALES O PEORES QUE LA PRESUNTRA TRAMA DEL FISCAL MENA
PERO GLOBALES
para hacer un profiling genetico
que deja a las colecciones de "olores corporales de disidentes" de la alemania en un infantil juego de niños
has de entender
que todos estoy spy gadgets tan paco
han sido sustituidos por bits en bases de datos
pero el espiritu de control y espionaje a cambiado bien poco
ahora tienen mas datos que en la epoca de la stasi, el kgb y la CIA y buena parte se los damos nosotros, o SE LOS DABAMOS, ponselo dificil que tambien se puede
Germany
"The Stasi Had a Giant Smell Register of Dissidents"
Resultado de imagen de stassi bottles odourSecurity and Protests at the G8 Summit
"The Stasi Had a Giant Smell Register of Dissidents"
German Rights Organizations Accuse Police of Illegal Activities
"A New Day is Dawning for Globalization Critics"
German police have been accused of using Stasi methods after admitting to using "scent profiling" of G8 activists. In an interview, the head of the Stasi museum in Leipzig explains why the issue is so emotive.
The Stasi usually used a bright yellow dust cloth to collect scent profiles
The Stasi usually used a bright yellow dust cloth to collect scent profiles
Tobias Hollitzer is the head of the Stasi "Runde Ecke" Museum in the eastern German city of Leipzig. A row of sealed jars, each containing a seemingly innocuous yellow dust cloth, forms part of the museum's permanent exhibition. But these jars were part of the East German secret police's collection of scent samples used to keep track of dissidents.
Hollitzer talked to DW-WORLD.DE about the Stasi's collection of people's smells and what he thinks of law enforcement using the method today.
DW-WORLD.DE: Mr. Hollitzer, the East German secret police, the Stasi, collected scent samples. Why?
The Stasi had a whole range of methods and means to try to track down people who said or did anything critical of the East German communist regime. Collecting scent samples was used to try to identify those, for example, who had distributed flyers or who wrote critical graffiti.
How did the Stasi collect these samples?
Hundeschnauze
Specially trained dogs are used to identify people's smells
When they found a piece of graffiti or a flyer then they took a dust cloth, which was usually yellow, and left it for a while lying next to the flyers covered by a protective piece of aluminum foil and then they had their sample. The cloth was then sealed in a pickling jar and stored. If the Stasi later came across a suspect in the process of the investigation, they tried to get a sample from this person as well -- of course, secretly. A trained dog was given the two smells, and if they matched, the Stasi had a concrete name.