203 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
203 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4029
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Title: HPR4029: The product.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4029/hpr4029.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:50:25
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4129 for Thursday 11 January 2024.
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Today's show is entitled The Product.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Good Heavens, its secret hat time with Scoti.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host, some guy on the internet.
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Today let's talk about the product.
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What is the product?
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Most of us we may associate the product with whatever it is that we want.
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I want to listen to a podcast.
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Let's head on over to HPR.
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HPR, Hacker Public Radio, is a service that provides the product, the podcast.
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HPR has a few ways of delivering the product.
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And we, the consumer, we have many ways of consuming the product.
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Well, I should say there's only one way to consume our podcast, however we have many
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technologies that allow us to consume the product.
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And for the most part, it's very simple, very easy.
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You show up, you sign up, you receive, you consume.
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And with this type of product, you can consume it over and over again, right?
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There are more shows to come.
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And you can listen to previous shows.
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So there's lots of product, lots of value in the product.
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Now I can hear it already, G Scotty, thanks for telling us how podcast work.
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We greatly appreciate that.
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Well, of course, I had to add that lighthearted bit of information in just in case you didn't
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fully clear the room.
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Now that you're alone and whoever was listening in on the conversation has finally left because
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they're bored to death by that bit of information, we can begin the real show.
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Because the reality is you are the product.
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I know, I know, but you've spent money.
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You've worked hard, you've earned, and now you've taken what you've earned.
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You've budgeted it appropriately, made sure you had a certain amount of disposable income
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and used that disposable income to purchase what you believe to be a product.
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When in reality, you didn't actually purchase a product, you've merely paid the entrance
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fee to becoming the product.
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In many situations when you make a purchase, the service provider has an obligation called
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know your customer.
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And in some cases, they may not have the obligation, but they still want the details on who you
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are.
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So one of the requirements in receiving access to the service or what you believe to be
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the product, you have to provide information about yourself.
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And we're not talking about just cellular service because we all know you're the product
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there.
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Anything on the cell phone is designed to data mine you all day every day.
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You've basically accepted a GPS chip that goes everywhere with you, reports constantly
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on your location, and who you're with.
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I just remind you of two quick things, by the way, remembered when COVID was very big
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in the news, and they wanted everyone to feel, quote, safe, close quote.
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After they asked that you use technology on your device that would alert you in case
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you were in close proximity to another individual that reported to have had COVID within the
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last 14 days, well, how do you think that's done?
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And do you actually think any of that turned off?
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Do you think it went away?
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And I'm not even going to get into all of the tile devices.
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You know the ones I'm talking about that have been used to stock individuals that reveal
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that your device, especially if you have an Apple device, constantly pings other devices
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without you knowing about it.
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It doesn't alert you to any of this.
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They've only decided to inform you that the device is actually pinging other devices.
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Once it was discovered that people were using these tile devices, these tags to spy mostly
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on women, but, I mean, they spy on anyone that they can't, they put them on two cars
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and in other packages and things and send them out so that way they can track you wherever
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you go.
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The companies have already been doing this for years.
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It's just that a few shady individuals that you really don't want to meet have decided
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to use this technology for their own means, rather it's to find out where you live, where
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you work, where you go, and when you leave home, whatever.
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And keep in mind, even if you do not want this feature, you are unable to opt out so
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long as you have the device.
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Opting out means no longer having the device, and it's even becoming more difficult than
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that these days.
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If you're around someone else who has the device, I mean, pretty soon it's gonna be difficult
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to opt out at all.
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So long as someone else has one, you're opted in.
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I mean, that's true with things like the Ring Doorbell.
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There are sites out there that allow average citizens to view whatever your Ring Doorbell
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has access to.
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Now, I'm not gonna speak to the legitimate sea of these sites, but you can go out and
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see other people's Ring Doorbell like what the doorbell is focused on.
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We know that Ring works with law enforcement, however they don't secure these devices.
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So imagine you don't have a Ring Doorbell.
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You leave your home every day at a set time to go fulfill your obligations, and some
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scumbag is just watching you from somewhere else learning your patterns because of someone
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else's Ring Doorbell.
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It's not pleasant, and it's also not optional.
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You don't get to say you and your family, your children, your loved ones.
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Have the pleasure of being watched by any and everyone on the internet.
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Day in, day out, and there's no one to petition about this.
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Well, sure, you can go and speak to your neighbor about it.
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I'm sure that'll go well.
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Maybe you can write a letter to your local politician, find out how far that gets you,
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and it doesn't stop there.
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Have you ever bought a car?
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Have you ever bought a house?
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No matter what you do, when you put your information into a record, into a database, it is managed
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for the purpose of making you the product.
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I want you to think about that car, all these different things that you want that you
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need.
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They've all been turned against you.
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They all like a lore now, bait that has been smeared onto a trap, and it's done this
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way because it's more convenient for you.
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You see, you are used to a certain way of life, and they understand that.
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So they've taken all that is familiar and turned it against you.
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Now whenever you think that you're making a purchase for that car, for that house,
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for that anything, your information gets hoovered up and sold to the hot, not even the
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highest bidder.
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It just gets sold.
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And in many cases, they don't even separate the data, like store the more sensitive data
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away, like social security numbers and things of that nature, that's hard to change.
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You know what I mean?
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If it gets leaked out there, you're really screwed.
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Yeah, they don't even bother.
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In some cases, all of it gets packaged together in the same database, and whoopsie, we forgot
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to secure it.
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It was just wide open on the internet, and we just found out the other day half the world
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had access to it.
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Whoops.
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Oh, and by the way, when we informed you that your data was exposed to the entire world,
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we'll decide to do that about nine months from the time that we discovered.
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Yeah, no rush.
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You may be thinking, I don't own a house.
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Maybe I don't even own a car, I take public transportation, or I ride my bike, or whatever,
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you know, I don't have a car, though, or a house, so they don't have mine, at least not
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as much of my data, well, I just want to stop you.
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Just hold it right there just a moment.
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How did you come by that bicycle?
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How did you come by any of the things that you own?
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Do you have a little piece of plastic that has numbers, sort of a pressed into it, and
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a magnetic strip, or maybe a little chip on it, you know, and you use it as a way of authenticating
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during a purchase, creating a transaction, which has an ID, which gets stored, is that
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how you can buy any of the things you own?
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Remember, you are the product.
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All those other things that are there?
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Just bait.
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Think about all the food you purchase.
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Then think about all the people just in your area, like your state that are starving.
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And then think about all the food that we throw away.
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You make a purchase.
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Those who cannot make the purchase.
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The bait and the fact that we just chuck it in a garbage.
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Even if it's not bad, we have a sell-by date.
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That does not explain the reason why it's there, right?
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It's not an expiration date as in it's going to be bad if you consume it.
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No, no, no, no.
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We want the bait to be optimal for the product.
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It must look a certain way.
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And think about it.
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A lot of that food that's still perfectly good, that can actually feed the homeless, the starving.
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Forget about them.
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Throw this in the trash, burn it, destroy it.
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But nobody's going to get access to this bait without us getting access to them.
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And I know some of you might be thinking.
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Yes, yes, but there are lawyers and lawsuits and things.
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If someone eats the food and gets sick, that's why they can't donate it.
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They have to destroy it because blah, blah, blah, blah.
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There may be some truth to that line of argument that they have to throw away because of legal reasons.
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So let me also remind you that these same legal reasons did not stop us from taking experimental
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medicine.
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Medicine that could not have been approved by our improvement agencies, you know, food
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drug administration or whatever and making it available to everyone, the entire country.
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Not just the less fortunate who could not afford it.
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No, no, no, every single person in the country, even if you're just visiting.
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We made it available, even though it was not approved.
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And we made it to where you could not sue anyone for it.
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And when we did that, we also stood by and watched as employers, some not all, demanded
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that their employees take that experimental drug that was not approved.
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Oh, yeah, we demanded that we even talk about everyone carrying their cards, proof that
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you took the experimental drug.
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Remember that?
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Yeah, so before you go telling us about laws, just remember, we have plenty of solutions
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when we want them, when we want them.
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You've been gone for a while and people are going to start to notice you've been missing.
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So take your hat off, put it away and return before anyone notice you were gone for too
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long.
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Mentally, you may feel that a sensation that's equivocal to leaving a dark room into a brightly
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lit area, how your eyes have to readjust and it's everything's just sort of overexposed
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for a moment.
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And then it slowly starts to adjust to where you can see properly.
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This feeling is natural.
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It happens when you've been informed, but keep quiet about it.
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You don't want to alert the normies they might have you brought in.
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So tuck that hat away somewhere safe and destroy this episode, don't let anyone find
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it.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive and
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rsync.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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