Saturday, January 25, 2014

Polymer Notes

In 2011 The Bank Of Canada released new anti counterfeiting notes (plastic notes)

According to Wealth Cycles this could be the very personal invasion of privacy with all the added security features and technology can we really put trust in phony man made money and currency or keep it simple with gold and silver which stood the test of time it's proven


GnS+Research
https://wealthcycles.com/blog/2014/01/25/plastic-banknotes-practical-substitute-for-paper-or-invasion-of-privacy






The World Industrial Reporter announced last year the development of the “world’s first ultra-high frequency Schottky diode based on amorphous Indium-Gallium-Zinc Oxide (IGZO) semiconductor.” In English, the advanced technology will allow “thin-film passive UHF RFID tags” to be placed in thin-film packaging, replacing the barcode tags now placed by retailers on each individual item. The new tags would “enable more accurate tracking of individual products like expiration, misplacement, theft,” the article continues. If a cellophane film cigarette or gum package can now be embedded with an intelligent sensor, is it too far-fetched to imagine $100 or $20 bills capable of recording location, usage or even a theft alarm? If so, the relative privacy of cash transactions will no longer be sacrosanct—certainly no surprise in our increasingly 'transparent' and voyeuristic world.

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