Oh My Gail.....we were just discussing how the Smart Meters can - TopicsExpress



          

Oh My Gail.....we were just discussing how the Smart Meters can mess up your Dads pacemaker this would be a good one to hand to the Utility Company. A few years ago I watched two doctors speak about how WIFI EMFs can stop a pacemaker or a brain implant for Parkinsons is how I know this stuff...... Ill try to find them. One was a Cardiologist and he wont even wear his cellphone on his hip and warns his pacemaker patients also , the other was a Neurologist who said he cant even shop in a Mall cuz if he walks into a store , and they have one of those RED Laser , metal detectors in the door way , it will stop his Brain Implant and he will drop to the floor , and he has 10 seconds to re-activate it , if he remains conscious to do so...t or he is dead...They both were trying to tell us how dangerous these EMFs are to someone who has a medical device. I tried to tell the City Commissioners this in Harbor Springs when I had six Smart meters on our quadraplex and in Traverse City when they were getting 900 WIFI Parking meters but they wouldnt listen to me! This article will prove it ....that someone could use it as a weapon..and our utility companies already are ! Jack’s death came one week to the day before he was scheduled to detail one of his most recent exploits in a Black Hat talk called “Implantable Medical Devices: Hacking Humans.” “I was intrigued by the fact that these critical life devices communicate wirelessly. I decided to look at pacemakers and ICDs (implantable cardioverter defibrillators) to see if they communicated securely and if it would be possible for an attacker to remotely control these devices,” Jack told Vice last month. After around six months of research, Jack said he developed a way to hack one of those devices remotely and send it a high-voltage shock from upwards of 50 feet away. “If the devices can be accessed remotely, there’s always a potential for abuse,” he told Vice tech reporter William Alexander. In a blog post earlier this year, Jack said he was influenced by a recent episode of the television program “Homeland,” in which a terrorist remotely hacked the pacemaker of the United States vice president. “In my professional opinion, the episode was not too far off the mark,” he wrote. When Alexander asked Jack if a government official outfitted with a pacemaker would be vulnerable to assassination from a hacker, the researcher remarked, “I wouldn’t feel comfortable speculating about such a scenario.” “Although the threat of a malicious attack to anyone with an implantable device is slim, we want to mitigate these risks no matter how minor,” he wrote on his blog post. At the time, Jack said the vulnerability was being discussed with medical device manufacturers. “Over the past year, we’ve become increasingly aware of cyber security vulnerabilities in incidents that have been reported to us,” William Maisel, deputy director for science at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, told Reuters. “Hundreds of medical devices have been affected, involving dozens of manufacturers.”worldtruth.tv/hacker-dies-days-before-he-was-to-reveal-how-to-remotely-kill-pacemaker-patients-2/
Posted on: Wed, 04 Jun 2014 02:35:14 +0000

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