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Evidence of Self Assembling Nano Circuitry in the Pfizer Vaccine

submitted by nada to Covid1984 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 01:19:43 ago (+16/-5)     (files.catbox.moe)

https://files.catbox.moe/d8z2gk.mp4



13 comments block


[ - ] Rawrination 1 point 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 03:14:14 ago (+1/-0)

Wow.

[ - ] Kozel 9 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 03:12:31 ago (+9/-0)

I really hate when these types of videos get technical details wrong. A technically inclined person is likely to dismiss the entire video based on false technical statements.

In this instance the claim is that "IP addresses are coming from the jabbed", at around 2:12. This is not something that makes sense. An IP address can only exist within a network. The way the statement would make sense is that a network signal with a unique identifier is being transmitted.

[ - ] Youdgetfuckedfaggot 1 point 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 12:37:36 ago (+1/-0)

I've heard mac addresses, which I suppose makes a little more sense

[ - ] deleted 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 09:06:06 ago (+0/-0)

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[ - ] localsal 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 14:14:04 ago (+0/-0)

Exactly.

If these things can get IP addresses, then I would like a dose squirted onto my desk, so I can connect it to my computer and get free internet.

kikes will never give away the internet for free, so how are these things getting free connections to the internet?

[ - ] Kozel 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 14:56:49 ago (+0/-0)

ip addresses can exist on a LAN without WAN (internet) access. The premise and conclusion you've written are wrong.

[ - ] localsal 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 16:24:31 ago (+0/-0)

Nothing can connect without credentials.

Do (((they))) expect that every LAN has a backdoor that is accessible to their singular (or small group of) password?

Try to connect to the "guest" wifi at a typical establishment - isn't there an acceptance step needed, such as clicking the "I agree" button on the home webpage, etc.

A device cannot get an IP address without some form of credentialing - ie, DHCP is the standard and the server typically restricts access. Otherwise your phone with wifi turned out would have 100 IP addresses....

[ - ] Kozel 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 19:17:12 ago (+0/-0)

plug in a cable to a router or switch and be part of a lan without credentials

connect to a open wifi without credentials

guest wifi at typical establishments have extra configuration for agreement pages, that configuration can be turned off

one can set your an ip address at device level and bypass DHCP. DHCP is not a requirement for networks. networks functioned for decades without dhcp

you don't know shit, don't talk about things you do not know

[ - ] localsal 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 20:13:28 ago (+0/-0)

LMAO.

Do you understand the context of what is being discussed?

Nano devices being self-generated within an injection...

How, exactly, will these devices connect to anything? Obviously they will, because they will have to transmit some kind of data, right?

Even if they have a static IP address, what will allow their connection?

Unless the entire internet changes the security protocols to allow such a device to connect and transmit, there is very little gained by this device.

Wardrivers have done all the shit you talk about. Security has increased a lot since then. Nobody wants the (((feds))) to knock down their door for child porn or other illegal shit anymore.

Tell me, oh wise one, how this self-assembled nano computer will transmit the data to (((those))) that want it?

[ - ] Kozel 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 8, 2022 21:14:08 ago (+0/-0)

ble network does not use ip addresses and can pair with a device without password

rfid transmits data without authentication

you're stuck on some bullshit about ip addresses which I pointed out is a false premise to begin with

[ - ] localsal 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 9, 2022 01:05:36 ago (+0/-0)

There was another post that I commented on pretty similarly.

Trying to inject these little "self-assembling" nano devices is most likely not real.

a) the "mark of the beast" will be a known thing - why try to do it in secret like this article implies?

b) is the infrastructure in place to take any ble/rfid device and get the data from the implanted person all the way to the central repository? I am highly skeptical. Doing something the article would need requires pretty much every phone to be backdoor app'd with whatever the data collection software is, along with sending to the proper place. Security researchers would have to stumble upon it at some point just due to the proliferation of the code.

c) is there a self-assembling nano device capable of self power? enough power to transmit data? what data is it transmitting? what is the point of the secret data?

along with a) there needs to be an individual specific data pack created and 'known' for each person, so the mark of the beast can be used effectively to buy and sell. Anything injected in secret cannot be used to conduct transactions.

[ - ] Kozel 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 9, 2022 02:53:51 ago (+0/-0)

a) is presumption and not a persuasive argument for me

b) I have seen articles indicating that just about every device post early 2000s has its cpu die cast with a backdoor die that functions independently

c) rather than self powered they could draw power from body heat for very low energy broadcast. Perhaps they could transmit numerical of some sort, perhaps for inventory, or as a foundation for something else.

I'm not convinced this is a thing, namely because the source is infowars and alex jones had tranny porn on his iphone.

[ - ] deleted 0 points 3.3 yearsJan 9, 2022 03:02:53 ago (+0/-0)

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