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Above Phone is presented as a privacy-focused alternative to standard smartphones, giving users complete control over their phone and apps. It claims to function without tracking, forced logins, or advertising. The phone is compatible with any cell service and allows private app downloads. The AboveSuite includes a VPN, private email and calendar, private chats, video calls, Internet phone, and a search engine. New users receive a free 45-minute live call for support, along with free email and chat support, guides, and video courses.

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Speaker 0: Pegasus is real. The NSO group in Israel designed an exploit that they can send to your phone number with an iPhone at least and gain full access to your phone, meaning your camera, your photos, your text messages, every single thing on your phone that you have access to and more and you will have no idea that it's on your device. It's really dangerous. And how do you prevent it? You can't. Don't use an iPhone or don't let your number get leaked. I mean, there's nothing you could do. Holy fuck. Yeah. It's considered a zero day exploit and also a zero click, meaning you don't have to interact with the phone at all.

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Introducing the Humane AI PIN, a compact device and software platform that offers all-day battery life. With no wake words, it only activates when engaged through voice, touch, gesture, or the laser ink display. The AI PIN features its own connectivity through the Humane network and runs on a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset for fast AI processing. It includes an ultra-wide RGB camera, depth sensor, motion sensors, and a unique speaker for immersive sound. The device prioritizes privacy with a trust light indicator and a dedicated privacy chip. It offers various AI experiences without the need for apps, such as music streaming, messaging, web browsing, and more. The AI PIN also allows for seamless retail transactions, photo and video capture, and personalized recommendations. Accessories like clips and shields are available for customization and protection.

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AI-powered Skill is a self-flying device with fast processors and anti-sniper capabilities. It features cameras, sensors, and facial recognition like modern mobile devices. The device contains 3 grams of explosive that can penetrate the skull upon detonation.

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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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We have developed a computer that not only understands your words but also assists you in completing tasks. Our advanced RabbitOS operating system contains a powerful action model, enabling real-time interactions between you and Rabbit. We were so impressed with the concept and test results that we decided to create a unique mobile device called R1, which serves as your Pocket Companion.

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A GSM jammer generates white noise signals without data, blocking GPS, GSM, 3G, and WiFi signals. This is why it's called a jammer.

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This device is for those with eye strain, insomnia, a desire to spend time outside, or heavy readers and writers. It helps reduce eye strain from screens, improves sleep by reducing blue light exposure, and can be used outdoors. It is like a powerful reading tool for students, professionals, and avid readers.

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Above Phone offers a privacy-focused alternative to standard smartphones, giving users complete control over their phone and apps without tracking. It works with any cell service and requires no forced logins. The phone includes AboveSuite, featuring a VPN, private email and calendar, private chats, video calls, Internet phone, and a search engine. Users can download apps privately and control their phone with secure hardware. New users receive a free 45-minute live call, along with free email and chat support, guides, and video courses.

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I am in a Faraday cage to block signals and have a scrambler to ensure no communication in or out. I am an escaped slave from the system, urging others to break free from the 9 to 5 life controlled by corporations and government. Life is a mystery, beautiful when free from deception. I will keep speaking out. Thank you for listening.

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AI-powered Skill is an advanced flying device with fast processors and anti-sniper capabilities. It features cameras, sensors, and facial recognition like modern mobile devices. It contains 3 grams of shaped explosive for lethal impact. This technology can penetrate skulls and destroy targets effectively.

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Hakim Anwar, CEO and founder of Above Phone, joins Clayton to discuss pervasive surveillance and how to protect personal privacy in 2025–2026. The conversation covers why traditional devices and services—especially iPhones, Samsung/Android phones, and their app ecosystems—are highly surveilled, the role of Amazon Web Services in monitoring traffic, and how messaging apps on these devices are tracked. They frame the problem as a loss of personal privacy and a move toward centralized infrastructure that can be controlled or cut off by large tech platforms. Hakim explains the origin of Above Phone. He started as a software engineer, was already aware of surveillance concerns, and became involved in freedom-based social networks. He pivoted toward open-source technology (Linux, degoogled phones, open-source software) and, five years ago, helped establish Above Phone to create usable privacy-centric devices that are actually functional for daily life. The goal is to be more usable and more private than big tech. The product philosophy emphasizes usable privacy. Above Phone builds on open-source operating systems like GrapheneOS, modeling them off Android but severing ties with Google and other big tech. Hakim notes that typical Samsung/Google Android devices have “god mode” access by Google (and to some extent Samsung), and emphasizes that Above Phone devices are designed to have zero connections to big tech by default, while still enabling users to run necessary apps. Users can choose to install Google services if needed, but in a limited, privacy-conscious way—these services act like normal apps on the device rather than the centralized, all-encompassing control found on stock devices. The phones can be used with existing cell service, and data transfer from iPhone or Android is supported, with live, in-person setup assistance. Setup and operation details: - You can switch to the Above Phone by moving your number with the SIM card (five-minute process), or use the Above Phone in parallel while migrating. - The Above Phone supports both physical SIMs and eSIMs; the data SIM service is eSIM-based. - A private, in-person support team helps with data transfer and setup. - The device can run a sandboxed second profile for Google services, isolating them from personal data. This sandbox can hold essential apps (e.g., WhatsApp) while the primary profile remains private. If needed, Google services can be used in a fully isolated manner, or work apps can be run entirely without Google involvement. Open-source equivalents are provided for many common apps (navigation, messaging, etc.). Privacy mechanics and surveillance: - Hakim explains that big tech devices continually “phone home,” with independent studies showing frequent data transmission to Google and Apple. Enhanced visual search on iPhone, enabled by default, scans photos for landmarks and can link to private indexes, illustrating how centralized platforms can harvest data even without explicit user consent. - Above Phone disconnects from Google’s update stream and ships with zero Google services by default; updates come from open-source developers, not from Google/Apple. Users can still opt to install Google services, but these are constrained and do not have the same “god mode” permissions as on stock devices. - The device supports a private, end-to-end encrypted messaging protocol based on XMPP (Jabber), which is decentralized and can run on a self-hosted or community-driven network. WhatsApp, he notes, is still built on XMPP. The Above Book Linux laptop is highlighted as a privacy-oriented alternative to mainstream Windows/Mac ecosystems. Linux is presented as cooperative, transparent, and less profit-driven. The Above Book ships with an easy-to-use Linux variant designed to avoid terminal use, includes a privacy-focused web browser (Ungoogled Chromium), and offers open-source software replacements (office apps, photo editing, etc.) that store data locally. The laptop supports local AI with Mike Adams’ Brighteon AI integration via LM Studio, enabling private, offline AI capabilities on the device. The company positions Linux and Above Book as enabling local work, with offline AI and offline maps via OpenStreetMap-like tooling. Hakim closes with a forward-looking stance on digital ID and the “surveillance grid” being advanced through regulatory acts into 2027–2030. He frames the investment in Above Phone and Above Book as a preparation for a world where privacy must be actively preserved, and encourages viewers to explore abovephone.com/redacted and abovephone.com for more information and products. David and Clayton engage on skepticism, marketing, and the broader implications of privacy-centric technologies, reinforcing the idea that the goal is practical privacy and education rather than ideology.

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RadioShack advertises its affordable transportable cellular telephone. The phone allows for constant communication. The advertisement depicts a phone call being taken in a field. The caller overhears news about a merger and advises buying 100 shares. The affordable transportable cellular telephone is available exclusively at Radio Shack.

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They are all connected to the base, and the base connects everything together. Electrical signals are transferred through the pins, and two small screws lock everything in place. So if for instance your phone is getting a little slow, you can just upgrade the block that affects the speed. Or if something breaks, you can easily replace it with a new one or update it with the latest version. Another great thing about this is you can customize your phone. So let's say this is your phone and you do everything in the cloud. If you're like this guy and love to take pictures, why not upgrade your camera? Or if you don't care about any of this stuff, you can keep it simple and get a bigger speaker.

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This Black Friday, elevate your technology with Above's secure, open-source phone and laptop solutions. The Above phone is compatible with any cell service and popular apps, while the Abovebook offers user-friendly software and reliable hardware. Above suite ensures your online privacy with a VPN, email, calendar, video conferencing, encrypted chat, search engine, and Internet phone number, all for $100 a year. These services sync across devices, and each purchase includes a 45-minute free support call, plus access to guides and video courses. Enjoy our Black Friday sale with $100 off all devices, an extra $100 off when buying two or more, and an additional $400 off when purchasing four. Visit abovephone.com/blackfriday to enhance your tech experience this season.

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The AI drone flies itself and reacts faster than a human. It uses stochastic motion as an anti-sniper feature. Like mobile devices, it has cameras and sensors, and performs facial recognition. It contains three grams of shaped explosive. The small explosion can penetrate the skull and destroy the contents.

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The speaker discusses the use of burner phones and emails for disinformation response. They mention a book that provides instructions on using burner phones and emails, as well as creating pseudonyms and identities. The speaker suggests using services like Sudo for creating pseudonyms and associated email, phone, text, web browsing, and payment accounts. They also mention the option of using disposable temporary email addresses for anonymity. Various options for burner phones are mentioned, including Tracfone. The speaker briefly mentions their experience selling Obamaphones.

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Speaker 0 asserts that there is no security whatsoever and that cybersecurity professionals face this problem daily. They state that while people are watching their phones, their phones are watching them. The operating system is designed to watch and listen to users, to know who their friends are, what is being said in text messages, and to listen at times. They claim that, although people look at their phones and it has many facilities, it is the world’s greatest spy device, designed as a spy device. Now, this.

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The speaker announces the iPhone 3G, marking the iPhone's first birthday. They state they have learned a lot from the first iPhone and have taken everything they've learned to the next level with this new iteration.

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If you remove the battery from your phone, I can still listen to you. In the past, even with the battery out, I could eavesdrop. We used to do undetectable things. This capability is in all equipment and chips, which we mostly get from China.

ColdFusion

LG G5 - Are Modular Phones Here? / Freedom 251 Scam!?
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In a recent Cold Fusion video, Dagogo Altraide discusses the Mobile World Congress, highlighting Samsung and LG as key players. Samsung is noted for its iterative approach with the S7, while LG is praised for innovation with its G5, a modular phone allowing users to swap parts for different functionalities. This modular design could signal a shift in the smartphone market, potentially leading to more customizable devices. Altraide also mentions the Nextbit Robin, which relies on cloud storage. He briefly touches on the controversial $4 smartphone, Freedom 251, suggesting it may be a scam due to its unrealistic pricing and lack of a factory.

ColdFusion

Motorola is Doing Great, Actually
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode traces Motorola’s evolution from a famed mobile brand to a diversified technology and security powerhouse, highlighting how the company survived a near-death period by refocusing on mission-critical communications for public safety, hospitals, event spaces, and schools. It recounts how Motorola helped spark the mobile era with the first handheld cell phone and the 68000 processor that powered early game consoles and the original Macintosh, illustrating a legacy of engineering prowess that persisted even as consumer phones waned. The narrative then follows a dramatic turnaround: a split into Motorola Solutions and Motorola Mobility, losses in the smartphone business, and a strategic pivot back toward core strengths in public-safety gear and integrated surveillance technology, aided by AI-enabled features that improve incident response, safety monitoring, and interoperability across devices. The closing sections reflect on the paradox of a brand once iconic for consumer mobile devices now reshaping public safety infrastructure while maintaining a touch of nostalgia for the RAZR era.

Coldfusion

The Greatest Story Ever Told [Where It All Began]
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Our world is rapidly changing, especially for today's youth who are growing up with technology at their fingertips. The concept of a computer originated with Charles Babbage in the 1820s, who envisioned machines performing mental tasks. In the 1930s, Conrad Zeus pioneered the idea of an automatic computer using binary. The 1940s saw the creation of ENIAC, the first electric general-purpose computer, which faced skepticism. The 1951 UNIVAC predicted the presidential election results, marking a turning point in public perception. The 1960s introduced the integrated circuit, enabling smaller, more powerful computers, crucial for NASA's moon landing. The 1971 microprocessor by Intel revolutionized the industry, leading to the personal computer era. Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs created the Apple II, which gained popularity with VisiCalc. The 1980s saw a battle between Apple and Microsoft, with Bill Gates capitalizing on software sales. The narrative continues with the invention of the mobile phone in 1973, setting the stage for future developments.

ColdFusion

What Was The First Smartphone?
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The first all-touchscreen smartphone was not the iPhone or LG Prada, but the IBM Simon Personal Communicator, introduced in 1994. The concept began with Theodore Paraskevakos in 1971, who envisioned combining telephone communication with computing and patented over 20 inventions. The Simon featured a touchscreen, could send faxes and emails, and included apps like a calendar and notepad. Despite its advanced capabilities, it sold only 50,000 units before being discontinued in 1995. With 1 MB of RAM and a 16 MHz processor, it was a powerful mobile device for its time, paving the way for future smartphones.

Modern Wisdom

Reducing Smartphone Addiction | The Light Phone
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this episode, Chris Williamson discusses the impact of smartphone addiction and the manipulation of cognitive biases by social media. He interviews Kaiwei, CEO of the Light Phone, a device designed to encourage users to spend less time on screens. Kaiwei emphasizes that the Light Phone is not anti-technology but aims to promote a more human approach to smartphone use. The Light Phone allows users to make calls without the distractions of social media or notifications, forwarding calls from their smartphones. Kaiwei shares insights from their research, revealing that participants felt anxious without their smartphones initially but reported a greater awareness of their surroundings afterward. The conversation highlights the pervasive nature of smartphone use and its effects on mental health, with Kaiwei noting that the attention economy drives app developers to keep users engaged. The Light Phone serves as a tool to inspire users to disconnect and engage with life more fully. Kaiwei also introduces the upcoming Light Phone 2, which aims to be a primary phone with essential features while still encouraging users to limit their smartphone dependency. The discussion concludes with a focus on the importance of mindfulness and being present in daily life.
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