Re: RFID in H&K handguns
Should a government wish to track people, RFID would be unlikely to make the short list of options. Especially considering that most of what (at least in the US government) is going on now involves tying existing data together to pull a complete picture of an event or person. This shows patterns, and predictability. It also gives multiple points of reference other than putting all the eggs into something that wouldn't work in the first place.
And on the whole super secret Lockheed deal, it could be the guy in question was just bullshitting. When someone is on the edge of their seat all wide eyed and saying "REALLY?" it is just too easy to not throw in a few (thousand) embellishments.
Should a government wish to track people, RFID would be unlikely to make the short list of options. Especially considering that most of what (at least in the US government) is going on now involves tying existing data together to pull a complete picture of an event or person. This shows patterns, and predictability. It also gives multiple points of reference other than putting all the eggs into something that wouldn't work in the first place.
And on the whole super secret Lockheed deal, it could be the guy in question was just bullshitting. When someone is on the edge of their seat all wide eyed and saying "REALLY?" it is just too easy to not throw in a few (thousand) embellishments.
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