http://www.xroxy.com/proxy-type-Socks5.htm
These actually work~
8.31.2010
Changing your Fingerprints
You can cut your finger a thousand times, but the finger prints will "grow" back the same almost every time. Sorry, it's hard to change, unless you change your genetic makeup.
You can, however, place a scar over the ridges. To do that, you'd have to damage the dermis layer of skin. That one goes way deep, to cut it off would pretty much slice your finger in half. And even if you cut it pretty deeply, the covering scars will still grow back as tiny little dots.
Dots. That's all they are. I've seen a few pictures of people who tried to change their prints. Learned enough interesting things for a lifetime in one semester of Forensics Investigation. But yeah, before scarring, just normal prints. After, you get these little dots anyone with 2 eyes and a brain can match the scarred to the unscarred print.
ONE MORE THING.....
When you scar your prints, it makes you stand out like a neon sign. In the US, there are countless hundreds of thousands of people with the sworls and ridges similar to yours. But people with the scars, that's something rare. The scars mark you, forever, and you'll stick out like a 1985 Beetle with shiny new spinning rims. Eww.
8.30.2010
Disabling Surveillence Video Cameras
In his research, Mr. Naimark discovered that there was already military literature widely available about using lasers to blind sensors, and that it was relatively simple to become invisible in front the cameras that now watch over many public spaces in this country.
"I began by aiming an inexpensive laser pointer directly into the lens of a video camera," he writes. "The results were striking. The tiny beam neutralized regions of the camera sensor far larger than the actual size of the beam. Properly aimed, it could block a far-away camera from seeing anything inside of a large window."
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/07/technology/07ZZAP.html
2+2=?
If you don't understand what I mean, check out this post
"I began by aiming an inexpensive laser pointer directly into the lens of a video camera," he writes. "The results were striking. The tiny beam neutralized regions of the camera sensor far larger than the actual size of the beam. Properly aimed, it could block a far-away camera from seeing anything inside of a large window."
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/07/technology/07ZZAP.html
2+2=?
If you don't understand what I mean, check out this post
8.29.2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)