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Speaker 0: Facial recognition will be used to unlock your digital identity, which is going to be a tool of control for the agendas that are coming down the pipeline. Elements of that control are already with us. Alexa, good morning. Good morning. You are never alone in your home, and this is why. All your devices at home and all smart appliances, they are all connected on a wireless network. Many of these devices will have cameras, many will have microphones, and so they are monitoring everything all the time. Your smart appliances are communicating with the smart meter and sending it real time usage data. If there is a Ring camera also in your home, a mesh network is formed and all your devices are being tracked within the home, its location, its usage and all the data is going to Amazon's servers. When you leave your home, all modern vehicles are connected to the Internet, so your automobile is being tracked all the time. When you are going under a string of smart LED poles and smart LED lights on the highway and in the streets of your towns and cities, those form a wireless network and are tracking your vehicle. They are tracking all the devices on you from smartphones to smartwatches when you're walking on the streets. So data is being collected twenty four seven continuously on every human being whenever you are within these wireless networks. Speaker 1: And it's obviously not good for health also because of all the electromagnetic radiation. Speaker 0: In the long term, the plan is to pretty much lock up humanity in smart cities, which is kind of a super set of a fifteen minute city. Speaker 1: They've sold all the state and local governments and countries that smart cities are about sustainability and the good of the city. But in reality, the language from the UN and WEF and their white papers is all inverted. So their monitoring is really about limiting mobility and no car ownership. Right? Surveillance control via LED grid is why the smart lighting is death. Water management is about water rationing. Noise pollution is about speed surveillance. Traffic monitoring is about limiting mobility. And then, of course, energy conservation is all about rationing heat, electricity, and gasoline. Another concept one should be familiar with is called geofencing, and that's think of it as an invisible fence around you where you cannot go beyond a certain point, and that'll be related to your face recognition, digital identity, and access control. Your smart contracts, Softbrick can turn off your digital currency beyond a certain point from your house. Our world has been turned into a digital panopticon. Speaker 0: That means you can be monitored, analyzed, managed and monetized.

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AI learns in milliseconds. You're still deciding what to eat. Every scroll, pause or click. Your hesitation is a signal. Your delay? That's data. While you're busy pondering your next move, the algorithms already guessed your mood. Excavation. Picked your next video and slipped in a targeted ad. You're not slow. You're just being slowed down. Notifications, pop ups, auto play. They're not features. They're friction designed to keep you in a loop of indecision. It's like a game of chess where your opponent makes their move while you're still figuring out how to hold the pieces. The real battle isn't about who can click faster, it's about who can control the pace. The game isn't speed anymore. It's lag warfare. Every moment you hesitate, they're one step ahead, crafting a reality that feels tailor made for you. But is it really?

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As you browse the Internet, algorithms monitor your eye movements, blood pressure, and brain activity to understand your identity. Imagine in 10 or 20 years, an algorithm could determine a teenager's position on the gay-straight spectrum. This raises concerns about privacy and the implications of such technology. What does it mean for personal identity if algorithms can define it so precisely?

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COVID-19 is driving the push for biometric surveillance, going beyond just monitoring our movements and activities. Governments and corporations now want to know what's happening inside our bodies, like our body temperature and medical conditions. This shift towards under-the-skin surveillance is happening even in democratic countries that previously rejected mass surveillance. It's like humans are gaining god-like powers, being able to manipulate and control life itself. We are becoming hackable animals, challenging the notion of free will and the privacy of our thoughts and choices.

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"Strange secrets are hiding in plain sight online, and you might be surprised by what you don't know." "First up, let's talk about the shadow web." "This isn't the dark web." "It's It's something deeper." "Imagine a place where dead websites still communicate." "These archives can glitch, loop, and sometimes even respond to you." "It's like a digital graveyard where echoes of the past linger waiting to be discovered." "Next, there's the three second rule." "Every time you scroll, tap, or pause online, you're being tracked." "If you linger for three seconds or more, that moment is marked forever by algorithms." "It's a silent witness to your online behavior, shaping what you see and how you interact with the digital world." "Your clicks are not just random." "They're data points that feed into a vast machine."

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If you're not paying for the product, congratulations. You are the product. Social media tracks you like a hawk. Search engines, they're not just answering your questions. They're selling you. Those free apps you love? Excavation. They're not tools. They're data vacuums sucking up every bit of information they can find. Every like, every scroll, every pause, that's value being extracted from you. You thought you were the user. Right? But guess what? You're the asset, the metric, the line item on a balance sheet. You're not just scrolling through your feed. You're monetized, packaged, and sold to the highest bidder. You're not just a participant. You're the product on the shelf waiting to be picked up and exploited. So next time you think you're getting something for free, remember, nothing is free. You're the one paying the price.

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"You ever see a webcam with tape over it? Cute, right? But here's the twist. It's not always the camera you need to worry about. Some smart TVs, monitors, even LED lights come equipped with hidden sensors. Not to see you, but to watch your patterns. They track light changes, reflections, even your breathing rate, all in the name of optimizing your experience. That Silicon Valley's way of saying they're studying you like a lab rat. And that dead pixel in the corner of your screen might not be dead at all. It's just biding its time, waiting to gather data on your every move. So next time you settle in for a binge watch, remember, you might not be the only one watching. Welcome to the age of surveillance, where even the seemingly innocuous can be a window into your life."

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- The speaker says this is probably the creepiest bulb here at Ace Hardware. - The Smart WiFi bulb works with Alexa and Google Home, activates with your voice, and syncs up to your Google Home and your Alexa, giving a George Orwell 1984 vibe. - The speaker explains this is why they stick to incandescent bulbs, noting that incandescent bulbs don’t steal your information or watch you.

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But here's the twist. Your feed is actually scrolling you. It's like a digital puppet master, adapting in real time to every flick of your thumb. You linger on that cute cat video, it learns. You rage at a political post, it feeds you more of that chaos. You pause for just a second, suddenly it's in a panic scrambling to keep your attention. This isn't just a playlist of content. It's a mirror reflecting your every desire and fear. Excavation. Each swipe strengthens its grasp, turning your preferences into a finely tuned algorithm. You're not just consuming, you're training a system that knows your mood better than your closest friend. Your feed isn't just alive, it's evolving, learning from your every interaction. And the scariest part, it remembers everything, every click, every pause, every emotion.

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The transcript discusses LED lights and a supposed IoT (Internet of Things) capability. It states that on 04/09/2019, Target confirmed they had provided Internet of Things lighting. IoT lighting means everything is connected and data can be collected from ongoing activities. The example given is that if you walk into Target with your phone, the lights will sync up to your phone to obtain data about what you’re purchasing and what you’re doing. The narration links this event to the period just before 2020, suggesting it occurred prior to the surge in shopping and alleged shortages that year. The speaker then asserts that these LED lights have microscopic cameras in them so they can watch people from every angle. The claim is that other stores, such as Whole Foods, are using similar technology in price tags that can scan and see who is buying items to collect data. The main takeaway presented is that if you bring LED lights into your home, the same type of technology claimed to be in these stores could be in the LED lights you bring into your house.

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Now I've heard they got meta glasses. They got glasses, which people are gonna walk around and record. If a person enters anybody's home with glasses which are recording the entire time, they're probably gonna have to beat them up. Meta Glasses sponsored by Ray Ban. Do you see how all these companies are in it together? They wanna sell their products and they wanna record you and put you into some George Orwell 1984 prison. Everybody's got cameras and they're all recording you with their ring doorbells and all this weird stuff. NPCs are aliens at this point. You gotta be an alien or an NPC. Buy all this technology and keep purchasing it and thinking that this is okay and chat GPT and this and smartwatches, and you're talking to your watch while you put your MetaGlasses and get your 55 boosters. Like, that's pretty much what it was.

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Your phone is not just a phone. It is the result of research that captures your attention, creating a power imbalance where you are unaware that you are being constantly monitored. They gather maximum information about you, surveilling you 24/7. In return, they know you so well that they can not only predict things about you but also manipulate your behavior. The internet of things will do the same.

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In the video, Speaker 0 explains that LED lights are being pushed aggressively, even given away for free, because they will connect everything in the Internet of Things. These LED lights can be connected to a cellphone, a tablet, all home appliances, the thermostat, cars, the garage, and more, allowing monitoring and data collection from these devices. They can also be used to turn off devices based on climate reasons and other factors, meaning you are connected up to the Internet of Things. What’s interesting, according to the speaker, is that these LED lights “ping a lot of microwave radiation,” which will be demonstrated in the next video. The speaker describes using a TriField EMF tester to check the radiation coming off the LED lights and shows results labeled as “off the charts.” The claim is that by bringing these lights into the home, microwave radiation is being pinged into the house. The speaker asserts that this microwave radiation can impact health, listing effects on the heart, brain, eyes, skin, and other organs. The LED lights’ capability to connect to the Internet of Things is highlighted again as part of this scenario. The video then notes a claim about a 2016 announcement from the AMA, stating that LED lights can increase the risk of cataracts and eye degeneration, implying long-term harm to eyesight while allegedly promoting environmental aims. In summary, the narrator claims: - LED lights are being pushed and given away because they enable the Internet of Things, connecting to smartphones, tablets, home appliances, thermostats, cars, and garages for monitoring and control. - These LEDs allegedly “ping a lot of microwave radiation,” detectable with an EMF tester, described as “off the charts.” - The radiation entering the home is claimed to impact health, including the heart, brain, eyes, skin, and other organs, in addition to enabling IoT connectivity. - The speaker cites a 2016 AMA statement asserting that LED lights can increase the risk of cataracts and eye degeneration.

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AI learns in milliseconds. Your hesitation is a signal. Your delay? That's data. While you're busy pondering your next move, the algorithms already guessed your mood. Excavation. Picked your next video and slipped in a targeted ad. You're not slow. You're just being slowed down. Notifications, pop ups, auto play. They're not features. They're friction designed to keep you in a loop of indecision. The real battle isn't about who can click faster, it's about who can control the pace. The game isn't speed anymore. It's lag warfare. Every moment you hesitate, they're one step ahead, crafting a reality that feels tailor made for you. But is it really?

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The speaker notes finding incandescent bulbs at Ace Hardware, highlighting a range of watt options such as 25-watt bulbs (including 25-watt globes) and some 40-watt bulbs, which the speaker says can work and are preferable to other options described as “torture.” They compare these to LEDs, pointing out that the spectrum of light from LEDs varies, with a specific emphasis on the yellow spectrum being “off the charts” in the examples shown. The speaker suggests that when entering someone’s home, you might as well ask what type of light bulbs they have. They raise a point about LEDs enabling additional features beyond lighting, stating that LEDs can be connected to the Internet and may have cameras, syncing with devices, and could watch or monitor you. This leads to the claim that the push toward LEDs was not only about saving energy but about having connected bulbs that could spy on people, while noting that old incandescent bulbs “don’t spy on you.” The speaker asserts that this surveillance motivation is connected to government actions, claiming that incandescents were being banned and eliminated because they supposedly prevented spying on citizens. The overall message contrasts incandescent bulbs with LEDs, presenting LEDs as part of a dystopian surveillance trend and portraying incandescents as non-spying alternatives.

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Speaker 0 describes smart meters as more than just electricity meters, asserting they function as personal surveillance devices. They claim smart meters sense when devices are turned on or off, measure watt usage (even for small devices like an electric toothbrush), and transmit that data wirelessly through neighbors’ meters to the power company. The data allegedly records electric consumption every minute, stored forever on computers the public cannot access, revealing when someone is home, asleep, on vacation, hosting visitors, using lamps or tools, running a business from home, or bootlegging energy off the grid. The speaker asserts this creates a vivid profile of private living patterns and indicates at-home presence on the night of a murder. The speaker contends this is not electrical metering but personal surveillance—a warrantless search daily. They claim personal life information travels from the meter to the power company, to the government, police, and insurance companies, and to anyone who partners with the power company to access it. The speaker further asserts that even without a direct data-sharing agreement, information can be intercepted via the wireless signal from the meter, because smart meters are radio transmitters. They identify a one-watt radio station licensed by the FCC as the transmitter sending all electrical life details to a data center. Examples are given of authorities in Ohio, Texas, and British Columbia using smart meter data to pinpoint marijuana grow houses, enforce business licenses, and punish private home activities, implying surveillance beyond what residents accept. The claim is made that the power company can sell personal life data to anyone, and that unusual power usage patterns can be used as probable cause to raid a home for growing marijuana or running a computer server without a license. The speaker describes this level of surveillance as “about as big brother as it gets,” with utility workers going door-to-door to install meters. They express a personal opinion that smart meters should be removed from homes, arguing that power companies cannot claim the right to install surveillance devices on residences. They equate smart meters with wiretapping and note wiretapping is illegal in all U.S. states and federal territories. The speaker asserts that allowing a smart meter is tantamount to walking around with a constant webcam on one’s head and accuses the industry of relying on implied consent—the idea that permission is granted if the utility can change the meter, even if residents don’t understand the scope of what’s happening. As a practical step, the speaker advises telling utilities not to change the meter, noting that older meters were billed successfully. They claim to have sent a certified letter denying installation of a smart meter and mention a copy of their letter is available in the video’s description for viewers to adapt. They state post office certified mail is used to obtain a receipt. The speaker concludes that if the meters are installed on every house in America, it would cease to be America.

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Speaker 0 argues that facial recognition will be used to unlock a digital identity and will serve as a tool of control for upcoming agendas. They claim that elements of this control already exist and describe a highly connected home environment: all devices and smart appliances are on a wireless network, many have cameras and microphones, and they monitor everything continuously. Smart appliances communicate with the smart meter and send real-time usage data. If a Ring camera is present, a mesh network forms and all devices are tracked within the home, with location and usage data sent to Amazon’s servers. When leaving home, modern vehicles are connected to the Internet and tracked constantly. On highways and in cities, smart LED poles and lights form a wireless network that tracks vehicles and all devices (phones, smartwatches) people carry, enabling continuous data collection on every person within these wireless networks. Speaker 1 notes that this is obviously not good for health due to electromagnetic radiation. Speaker 0 continues by stating that the long-term plan is to lock humanity into smart cities, described as a superset of a fifteen-minute city. They claim governments have been sold on smart cities as promoting sustainability and the common good, but quote language from the UN and the World Economic Forum (WEF) as inverted. In this view, surveillance is used to limit mobility and reduce car ownership. They describe surveillance via an LED grid as essential to smart lighting and view it as harmful. They extend this to water management, which they say is about water rationing; noise pollution as speed surveillance; traffic monitoring as mobility restriction; and energy conservation as rationing heat, electricity, and gasoline. The speakers introduce the concept of geofencing as an invisible boundary that people cannot cross, tied to facial recognition, digital identity, and access control. They mention smart contracts and a mechanism called Softbrick that can disable digital currency beyond a point from a person’s house. They summarize their view by stating that the world has become a digital panopticon, enabling monitoring, analysis, management, and monetization of people.

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"AI learns in milliseconds." "You? You're still deciding what to eat." "Every scroll, pause or click." "Your hesitation is a signal." "Your delay? That's data." "While you're busy pondering your next move, the algorithms already guessed your mood." "Picked your next video and slipped in a targeted ad." "You're not slow. You're just being slowed down." "Notifications, pop ups, auto play." "They're not features. They're friction designed to keep you in a loop of indecision." "The game isn't speed anymore. It's lag warfare." "Every moment you hesitate, they're one step ahead, crafting a reality that feels tailor made for you." "But is it really?"

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Avoid installing surveillance devices like ring doorbells, Google Nests, or Amazon Echoes from stores like Home Depot or Lowe's. These devices constantly monitor you and connect to your Wi-Fi. LED lights marketed as relaxing can actually cause anxiety. Smart Wi-Fi bulbs emit Wi-Fi signals like a microwave, potentially affecting the brain. Instead, choose incandescent bulbs as they are the safest option. They mimic sunlight and promote good health.

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COVID-19 is driving the push for biometric surveillance, going beyond monitoring people's movements to monitoring what's happening under their skin. Governments and corporations are collecting data on our whereabouts, social interactions, and even our medical conditions. Mass surveillance systems are being implemented in democratic countries, with a shift towards surveillance beneath the skin. Microchips are being used as keys, IDs, and wallets, providing instant access to a person's vaccination status. This advancement in technology gives humans unprecedented powers, allowing us to manipulate and control life itself. The concept of free will and individual choice is being challenged as humans become hackable animals.

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AI learns in milliseconds. You? You're still deciding what to eat. Every scroll, pause or click. Your hesitation is a signal. Your delay? That's data. While you're busy pondering your next move, the algorithms already guessed your mood. Excavation. Picked your next video and slipped in a targeted ad. You're not slow. You're just being slowed down. Notifications, pop ups, auto play. They're not features. They're friction designed to keep you in a loop of indecision. It's like a game of chess where your opponent makes their move while you're still figuring out how to hold the pieces. The real battle isn't about who can click faster, it's about who can control the pace. The game isn't speed anymore. It's lag warfare. Every moment you hesitate, they're one step ahead, crafting a reality that feels tailor made for you. But is it really?

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Speaker 0 introduces the concept: with this hack, your TV can watch you, as the TV is turned into a device that can monitor your surroundings while you watch. Speaker 1 explains how this is possible: by abusing the smart TV platform’s browser to gain access to the camera built into the TV. With a small amount of extra code, the camera can be turned on within the browser. This is designed so that viewers can see the camera feed, and it can run invisibly behind the web page you are looking at. Speaker 0 emphasizes the practical implication: you could be sitting in one place, such as watching TV from your bedroom, while someone elsewhere—potentially anywhere in the world—views the image of you watching. Speaker 1 confirms this scenario with an example: a person could be on a laptop in a cafe in Paris, and as long as they have a network connection, they could access your TV and the camera feed. Speaker 2 highlights a particularly alarming aspect: there is no indication that the camera is on, and there is no LED light to signal activity. As a result, the camera could be watching you without your knowledge. Speaker 0 asks what defines a smart TV and why it is attractive as a target for hackers. Speaker 2 responds by reframing the smart TV as a computer: it is not just a television, but a device that includes a web browser and runs Linux. Speaker 1 points to a more dangerous possibility: when people use smart TVs for activities like online banking, attackers could translate a legitimate bank address into a different IP address leading to a site controlled by the attacker, creating a phishing-like scenario where a user enters a username and password that goes to the attacker instead of the bank. Speaker 0 conveys Samsung’s response in a CNN Money statement: Samsung says it takes consumer privacy very seriously. They offer a hardware countermeasure by enabling the camera to be turned into the bezel of the TV so that the lens is covered or disabled by pushing the camera inside the bezel. The TV owner can also unplug the TV from the home network when smart TV features are not in use. As an additional precaution, Samsung recommends customers use encrypted wireless access points when using connected devices.

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- Five years ago, I stopped watching TV. - I felt really brainwashed at that time. - Now I still have cable TV. - And whenever I accidentally switch on a TV channel, it's like an instant wave of disgust rolling over me. - You know, the human eye recognizes 24 pts as a flawless movement. - That's why most movies are shot in 24 frames. - And they replaced some of the frames with different pictures, text, information. - And they found out the human eye doesn't notice it at all, but the human brain recognizes it. - Nowadays, TVs have a refresh rate of 100, 200, 300 frames per second. - Can you imagine how much additional information you can put into that without you even noticing?

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Speaker 0 argues that facial recognition will be used to unlock your digital identity, which will be a tool of control for upcoming agendas. Speaker 1 notes that elements of this control are already with us, citing Alexa as an example. Speaker 0 contends you are never alone in your home, because all devices and smart appliances are connected on a wireless network, many with cameras and microphones, monitoring everything all the time. Smart appliances communicate with the smart meter, sending real-time usage data. If a Ring camera is in the home, a mesh network is formed and all devices are being tracked within the home, including location and usage, with data going to Amazon’s servers. Speaker 1 adds that when you leave your home, modern vehicles are connected to the Internet and tracked continually. On the streets, smart LED poles and smart LED lights form a wireless network that track your vehicle. They claim data is collected 24/7 continuously on every human being within these wireless networks. Speaker 0 asserts this is not good for health due to electromagnetic radiation. Speaker 0 further states that in the long term the plan is to lock up humanity in smart cities, a super set of a fifteen minute city. Speaker 1 says they’ve sold smart cities to state and local governments and countries as about sustainability and the city’s good, but claims the language from the UN and WEF and their white papers is inverted. The monitoring is described as about limiting mobility and no car ownership. Surveillance via LED grid is described as why smart lighting is death. Water management is about water rationing; noise pollution about speed surveillance; traffic monitoring about limiting mobility; energy conservation about rationing heat, electricity, and gasoline. Speaker 0 explains geofencing as an invisible fence around you where you cannot go beyond a certain point, related to face recognition, digital identity, and access control. Speaker 1 mentions that smart contracts can enable Softbrick to turn off your digital currency beyond a certain point from your house. The world is described as turned into a digital panopticon. Speaker 0 concludes that this means you can be monitored, analyzed, managed, and monetized.

The Why Files

True Internet Horrors: Chip-Chan, Local 58, and The Plague Doctor
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode reconstructs a constellation of internet-origin horror cases that center on how viewers become participants in the suffering of others and how surveillance technologies shape our sense of connection. It opens by tracing the Chip Chan case, where a streamed, deteriorating life became a global obsession, illustrating how audiences can misread mental distress as mystery and turn it into content. The host describes how real-time viewing communities formed around her condition, how viewers documented every breath and movement, and how the responders—police and bystanders—could neither intervene effectively nor detach from the spectacle. The narrative then shifts to Local 58, an artificial broadcast world that uses familiar media formats to subvert trust in everyday signals. Each segment—weather alerts, emergency broadcasts, GPS directions, and sleep aids—coalesces into a warning: trusted systems can be weaponized to coax people outside, into danger, or into conformity with a ritual they do not understand. The episodes emphasize the coercive power of media tone and institutional authority, revealing how the mechanics of broadcast and interface cultivate obedience rather than safety. A late thread introduces a plague doctor puzzle video, where encoded frequencies carry real-world images of crime and trauma; the mysterious creator’s global scavenger hunt expands the theme from personal voyeurism to collaborative, transnational puzzle-solving. Across these stories, the throughline is clear: we willingly adopt technologies that surveil, transmit, and constrain us, even as they promise safety or entertainment. The conclusion leaves listeners with a somber reflection on contemporary life, where attention becomes currency and vulnerability becomes spectacle, and where not looking away may come at the cost of moral agency and privacy.
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