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Author Topic: Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil  (Read 1889 times)

Fansome

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Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil
« on: October 23, 2015, 2125 UTC »

A New Material Promises NSA-Proof Wallpaper

9:14 AM ET
By Patrick Tucker

A Utah company has a new nickel-carbon material that could help the Pentagon fight off some of its most haunting threats.

Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil. A small company called Conductive Composites out of Utah has developed a flexible material — thin and tough enough for wallpaper or woven fabric — that can keep electronic emissions in and electromagnetic pulses out.

Patrick Tucker is technology editor for Defense One. He’s also the author of The Naked Future: What Happens in a World That Anticipates Your Every Move? (Current, 2014). Previously, Tucker was deputy editor for The Futurist for nine years. Tucker has written about emerging technology in Slate, The ... Full Bio

There are a few ways to snoop on electronic communications. You can hack into a network or you can sniff out radio emissions. If you want to defend against the latter, you can enclose your electronic device or devices within a structure of electrically conductive, (probably metallic) material. The result is something like a force field. The conductive material distributes the electromagnetic energy away from the target in every direction — think of the *splat* you get when you hurl a tomato at a wall. These enclosures are sometimes called Faraday cages after the 18th-century British scientist who discovered electrolysis.

Today, Faraday cages are all over the place. In 2013, as the College of Cardinals convened to elect a new Pope, the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel was converted into a Faraday cage so that news of the election couldn’t leak out, no matter how hard the paparazzi tried, and  how eager the cardinals were to tweet the proceedings. The military also uses Faraday cages for secure communications: Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities or SCIFs are Faraday cages. You’ll need to be in one to access the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communication System, or JWICS, the Defense Department’s top-secret internet.
Related: Pentagon Moves More Communications Gear into Cheyenne Mountain

Conductive Composites has created a method to layer nickel on carbon to form a material that’s light and moldable like plastic yet can disperse energy like a traditional metal cage.

The material also holds promise for a scalable defense against an electromagnetic pulse weapon. EMPs are a rising concern for the national security community, but not a new one. Soviet research into electromagnetic pulse weapons goes back to 1949, and active experimentation back to the 1970s. EMPs entered the public eye via the 2005 James Bond movie GoldenEye, in which an EMP caused massive blackouts and widespread fried electronics. Two years later, Army Lt. Gen. Robert Schweitzer testified before the House Joint Economic Committee that such weapons might help fulfill Sun Tzu’s dictum to conquer an enemy without fighting. “If you can take out the civilian economic infrastructure of a nation, then that nation, in addition to not being able to function internally, cannot deploy its military by air or sea, or supply them with any real effectiveness,” he said. Translation: EMPs offer all the victory at a fraction of the cost.

In May, the Air Force confirmed that it was working on an electromagnetic pulse weapon of its own. A Faraday cage can serve as protection against exactly that sort of attack.

But the principal military application of the Conductive Composite material —aside from being able to enclose data centers in suitcases rather than guarded basement warehouses — could be to harden drones against electronic attack, a breakthrough that could pose a problem when the drones aren’t U.S.

Offline Pigmeat

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Re: Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil
« Reply #1 on: October 24, 2015, 0324 UTC »
Sounds like the stuff one Art Bell's guests was talking about the other night. The guest knows a guy who invents nightcaps that keep the aliens from reading your thoughts while you sleep with a special material.

I didn't get the internet addy for the things, nor did I understand why I would need one. I don't dream in Spanish.





Hmmmm....... it could explain that orange ball cap of Donald Trump's. God knows that mans brain is  scrambled beyond repair.

Fansome

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Re: Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil
« Reply #2 on: October 24, 2015, 1937 UTC »
I want to share with you a very deep concern I have about Pres. Donald Trump. Let me preface my discussion by quickly reasserting a familiar theme of my previous letters: If the only way to induce Pres. Trump to perceive his errors of perception and judgment and make him realize that whenever I confront him about his juvenile remonstrations, Pres. Trump either tells me that I don't understand him or feeds me some meaningless mumbo-jumbo about teetotalism is for me to go into hiding, then so be it. It would undeniably be worth it because a stockpile of Donald Trump quotes favoring libertinism could fill a junkyard. That concept can be extended, mutatis mutandis, to the way that I am truly not up on the latest gossip. Still, I have heard people say that one of Pres. Trump's idolators keeps throwing “scientific” studies at me, claiming they prove that Pres. Trump can scare us by using big words like “roentgenographically”. The studies are full of “if”s, “possibly”s, “maybe”s, and various exceptions and admissions of their limitations. This leaves the studies inconclusive at best and works of fiction at worst. The only thing these studies can possibly prove is that I myself proclaim that someday the vast majority of people will be eager to encourage opportunity, responsibility, and community. As we look to our future, however, we need to remain cognizant of our past. For example, we must always remember that Pres. Trump keeps telling everyone within earshot that he is always being misrepresented and/or persecuted. I'm guessing that Pres. Trump read that on some Web site of dubious validity. More reliable sources generally indicate that his factotums are too indolent to maximize our individual potential for effectiveness and success in combatting him. Don't make the mistake of thinking otherwise. Pres. Trump does, and that's why the cast-off ideas of debunked philosophy on which he has based most of his two-faced maneuvers do tell us one thing. They tell us that we must understand that Pres. Trump's programs of Gleichschaltung have created a potentially poisonous brew of alienation and rootlessness that Pres. Trump's den of thieves expertly exploits to recruit new members. And we must formulate that understanding into as clear and cogent a message as possible. Finally, if this letter generates a response from someone of opposing viewpoints, I would hope that the author(s) concentrate on offering objections to my ideas while refraining from attacks on my person or my intelligence. I've gotten enough of that already from Pres. Donald Trump.

Sounds like the stuff one Art Bell's guests was talking about the other night. The guest knows a guy who invents nightcaps that keep the aliens from reading your thoughts while you sleep with a special material.

I didn't get the internet addy for the things, nor did I understand why I would need one. I don't dream in Spanish.

Hmmmm....... it could explain that orange ball cap of Donald Trump's. God knows that mans brain is  scrambled beyond repair.

Offline Pigmeat

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Re: Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil
« Reply #3 on: October 25, 2015, 1045 UTC »
Buy the nightcap, Al.

Offline John Poet

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Re: Your next tinfoil hat will won’t be made of tinfoil
« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2015, 0547 UTC »
Psssst.  Donald Trump isn't President...

(although maybe someone should query his position on pirate radio.  He seems rather anarchist-friendly.  His answer could potentially put me in a quandry...)


John Poet

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