If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers. -- Thomas Pynchon
October 2003
Hitachi Develops a New RFID with Embedded Antenna µ-Chip
Dissertation Could Be Security Threat: Student's Maps Illustrate Concerns About Public Information
The two faces of Rumsfeld
War Inc. on the march to relieve US troops
Run, radish, run
The Threat of Intentional introduction of Foreign Animal Diseases Into the United States
VeriChip Corporation Retains Stanley L. Reid to Market Subdermal RFID VeriChip to Federal Agencies
CCRA loses data on 120,000 Canadians in server theft
Data-mining advisory group at Defense may continue work
Wink negative missing.
Fake religious leaders created by USA
Space: the ultimate high ground
Bacteria In Bottled Mineral Water Blamed For 6,000 Cases Of Food Poisoning A Year
The more commercial television news you watch, the more wrong you are likely to be about key elements of the Iraq War and its aftermath . . .
Japan Plans GPS Tracking System for Kids
Initial targeted markets include fixed surveillance applications for law enforcement . . ."
Spying on your teens via satellite for $600
Spy Drones May Be Allowed to Share U.S. Skies
Drug crisis grips Baghdad
PROCOR: When rich and poor kids eat the same diet, poor ones get fatter
'Too little' oil for global warming
Global warming 'will hurt Russia'
Huge iceberg wreaks havoc on Antarctic marine ecosystem, study finds
. . . can be controlled from the ground but is also designed to fly autonomously.
It was almost as though the soil was transparent.
Yellowstone will blow again - no telling when
Pentagon Offers 'Bioterror Kit' Online
Department of Homeland Security Awards Contract to International Biometric Group
The Nazis in Dubya's closet
Burma's virgin teak forests being ravaged by junta and rebels
China developing `paralysis warfare'
Starved By The IMF
Feds Cramming Privacy Reports
MIT bows out of controversial RFID tag research
Europe speeds up electronic ID plans
Brill and Partners to Launch 'Verified Identity Card'
Texas Plague Expert Says FBI Tricked Him
Grisly Reenactment Aims At Tourist Dollars
Eyeballing Arnold and Maria Schwarzenegger
After Trojan Horses and worms, here comes the Beast
Big Brother Spy Gear Moving Into Cars Next
U.K. Retailer Tests Smart Tags on Clothing
The earliest weapons of mass destruction
The Looniest Of All 9/11 Conspiracy Theories (no, really. this one takes the cake.)
Man-Made Earthquakes?
A broken heart may truly hurt
US/Israeli laser cannon
Superbomb ignites science dispute
Plugging microchips directly into the brain is no longer science fiction.
Computing with flowers
Talking with dogs
Spying with cats
Spying with catfish
10-megabits-per-second indoor network that uses human bodies as portable ethernet cables
Soy, a pseudoestrogen, blocks thyroid.
Excessive tofu causes rapid brain aging in older men due to pseudoestrogen effects.
America is destroying itself
Report: Unit Killed Hundreds in Vietnam
What well be reading in 30 years about Iraq.
Eyeballing the Naval Station Guantanamo Bay
An Area 51 in Russia? Some people think so and their suspicions are shared by the US Congress.
US Army: Sci-fi weapons closer than most think
World's first unmanned helicopter that's flown entirely by artificial intelligence.
Romania Emerges As Nexus of Cybercrime
A tough lesson on medical privacy
Plumbing Depths of Data Mining
IP Addresses For Coke Cans?
Home