212 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
212 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4484
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Title: HPR4484: When Your Dentist Uses ChatControl Logic
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4484/hpr4484.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-11-22 14:55:23
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4484 for Thursday 9 October 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, When Your Dentist Uses Chat Control Logic.
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It is hosted by Troler Coaster and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Troler Coaster alerts us to the dangers of the proposed EU chat control
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legislation.
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So here I am, sitting in the waiting room with a mildly annoying toothache, nothing
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got a shruffick, just one of those dull throbs that tells you something's going on in there
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that could turn nasty if ignored.
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The receptionist calls my name, and I walk into Dr. Chat Control's office.
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The dentist greets me with a concerned expression.
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I've reviewed your case, he says gravely, and many others.
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Toothaches are a serious problem.
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Did you know that in 2023 alone, at least 111,988 people in Europe experienced a dental
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pain that's over 60% of all global complaints traced to this region.
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Okay, I say, but I just need you to take a look at this one tooth.
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This is an epidemic interrupts, and we can't just treat symptoms anymore.
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We need a comprehensive mandatory risk assessment.
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Dr. Chat Control pulls out a 47-page questionnaire.
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First we assess the risk that your mouth might develop cavities, gum disease, or oral cancer
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he explained.
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This applies to everyone, regardless of whether they have symptoms.
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But I have symptoms, I say, this is why I'm here.
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Exactly, he says triumphantly.
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Which means your high risk.
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So we move on to phase 2 mitigation measures.
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He hands me a pamphlet titled safety by design for oral health.
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From now on, you need to implement parental control on your diet.
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Every candy will come with an age verification wrapper and user reporting mechanisms, so
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your teeth can flag potential problems and verify your age before consuming any hard
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foods.
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It's verification, I retort, but I'm 38.
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Perfect, he replies.
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That means you're old enough to consent to monitoring.
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Now, Dr. Chat Control continues, since your mitigation measures haven't been implemented
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yet, you just got here, I know, I'm authorized to issue a detection order.
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He holds up an official looking document with a judges signature.
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This allows me to scan not just the tooth that hurts, but your entire mouth and your
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sinuses, and your lymph nodes, and just to be thorough, everyone in the waiting room.
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Huh?
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Oh, hey, what?
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I blurt out.
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It's targeted.
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He assures me.
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We're only scanning high-risk areas, which, according to our independent EU dental
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center, is every tooth, every patient, all the time.
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But here's the clever part, Dr. Chat Control says.
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Pulling out what looks like a tiny sander strapped to an airbrush.
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Your enamel contains layers that currently block our view with regards to early detection
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of certain viruses.
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So we need to replace the enamel with an optimized layer that perfectly protects against
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currently known sugars and acids, but allows our government-approved detection equipment
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to inspect the content of your teeth.
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I'm flabbergasted.
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Oh, you want to weaken my enamel?
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Wow, only slightly.
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He said cheerfully.
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Just enough so that our scanner can monitor what's happening inside your teeth all the
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times.
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You'll feel much safer.
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And don't worry, the new enamel will still protect you from everything else.
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How is that possible?
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If you can penetrate it, I can't use the cautious.
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Well, factory-approved candies, for example, he says, repeatable candy manufacturers have
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agreed to respect the adapted enamel and not penetrate it.
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They've signed a treaty to use optimized sugars, okay?
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And the artisanal candies, I ask, he says, adjusting his glasses.
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Those are obviously illegal.
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Those criminals don't tend to honor treaties.
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So yeah, the adapted enamel will make your teeth more vulnerable to unauthorized cavity
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formation, bacterial attacks, and anyone who wants to exploit the fact that your natural
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protection has been replaced with enough to optimize version.
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So you're making my teeth less secure, I repeat?
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We're making them more observable, he corrects.
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With a slightly annoyed tone, that's a difference.
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Your teeth will still be protected, just not against us.
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Or hostile foreign candy shops.
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Or those criminal artisanal real sugar nuts.
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But you have no business there anyway.
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And they will definitely protect you against harms from law abiding candy.
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But I read like over 500 leading dentists signed a letter saying this would create massive
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vulnerabilities, I point out.
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Those dentists are thinking about long-term hygiene, but the chat controlled size dismissively.
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Besides, it's not a back door, if we're replacing the front door with a tinted glass door,
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given all your citizens are law abiding, his tone gets stoner if he continues.
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Let me say more.
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If you refuse to upgrade your enamel, we will consider you a risk of dental terrorism.
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This is no longer about your teeth only, you must know.
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If you choose to blatantly ignore your teeth, you're a threat to society.
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But the whole reason I am here is because I care about my teeth.
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Dr. Holtzup is machine and asks, do you want me to treat you or to report you?
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Okay, whatever.
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It seems everybody is doing this.
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I don't want to be the outcast, crying wolf all the time, so I gave in.
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It's a relief, the procedure isn't painful.
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After completing the baseline scan, Dr. Chat Control frowns at the screen.
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Hmm, this is concerning, he says.
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The system has flagged 8,412 potential cavities.
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Huh?
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What?
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But I only have 32 teeth, I whimper.
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The detection algorithm works on a probabilistic model, he explains.
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Swiss dental authorities report that about 80% of automated cavity reports of our false
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positives, so we'll need to investigate all of them.
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But that still means 1,682 of those threats are real?
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I say.
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Which is still 1,682 too many, Dr. Chat Control blurs.
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Now I'll need to drill exploratory holes in every tooth, in your gums, your tongue,
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and just to be safe in your neighbor's mouth, because the system flagged them too, when
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they walked past the waiting room.
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But the disk seems insane.
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The math is solid, he insists.
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Again at 99.99% accuracy, which doesn't exist, we still generate 100,000 false dental
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alerts per day across Europe's 450 million people, but we can't let the cavities win.
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While Dr. Chat Control explains his flawless system, I notice how the tooth that is actually
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hurting, the one I came to fix, is starting to abscess.
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Dr. I say, pointing to the swelling.
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We'll get to that after we finish scanning everyone, he says dismissively.
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The important thing is that no cavity goes undetected, even if it means we spend all our
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time investigating healthy teeth.
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But the actual problem is getting worse, I say.
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That's because sophisticated cavities have learned to evade detection.
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Dr. Chat Control explains.
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They change their appearance slightly, maybe grow on the back of the tooth instead of
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the front, or hide under existing fillings, our algorithms can't catch those yet.
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But what about that letter from those 500 dentists?
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They also claim it's technically infeasible?
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Ah, they're just not thinking big enough, the doctor blocks my argument.
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So here's the treatment plan, Dr. Chat Control says, we're gonna install a permanent scanning
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device in your jaw that monitors every tooth, 24-7, and reports any suspicious activity
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to a centralized EU dental database.
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Ooh, that sounds like a massive security risk.
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Ah, not at all, here it applies.
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The device is encrypted, only our scanner can look behind your upgraded enamel.
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What leaves your tooth is already encrypted, so your privacy is intact.
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No other device than ours can read the data.
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What about those knock-offs you can buy on all the express?
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I ask.
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Ah, they don't work reliably.
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And also, why would hackers want access to your teeth, his coughed?
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Although, now that I think about it, the device itself could make a high-valuable target for
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malicious actors as they could abuse them to learn how to make knock-off candy that
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doesn't get detected by scanners.
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Things your natural enamel would obviously protect against, but let's not go there.
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By the way, Dr. Chat Control adds casually, dentists and dental workers in the EU are exempt
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from the scanning requirement under professional dental secrecy.
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So there they don't get monitored, I ask.
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Correct, he says.
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Our oral health is a matter of public trust.
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Yours, however, requires constant surveillance.
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Ah, isn't that like a double standard?
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Eh, it's a two-tire system for a two-tire society, here applies pleasantly.
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Now shall we proceed with installing the jaw monitor?
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By this point, my actual toothache is developing into a full-blown infection.
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The pain is incruciating.
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Dr. I need antibiotics and a root canal, I cry.
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No, we don't do target treatments anymore.
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Dr. Chat Control says, that's the old model.
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Now we focus on comprehensive mandatory monitoring.
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But I'm going to lose my tooth, I say, perhaps he acknowledges.
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But while we were scanning everyone in the waiting room, we found three people with slightly
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suspicious molars.
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They're perfectly healthy now.
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But they could develop cavity someday.
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That's three potential problems prevented.
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And preventing is always better than curing.
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But my problem actually needs curing, I point out, it's getting worse.
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Yeah, he admits.
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But we've invested so much in the scanning infrastructure that we can't really afford
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to do traditional dentistry anymore.
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The system needs to justify itself, you understand.
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Oh, but this isn't sane, I repeat.
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This is progress, he corrects me.
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As I'm leaving the office, still with my untreated, painful mouth and a jaw full of surveillance
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equipment, I notice the sign on the door, signal dental, orthodontic streamer, and brought
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on mouth care, have seized operations in the EU due to incompatibility with mandatory
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scanning requirements.
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Apparently, the dentists who actually know how to fix my teeth without installing spyware
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have all moved to Switzerland.
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Meanwhile, I hear the voice of Dr. Chad Control behind me in the waiting room announcing
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to everyone, we've successfully detected 6,847 potential cavities this week.
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And someone asks what he means by potential, he quietly answers, only 11 were real, but
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that's 11 teeth saved.
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The infection is still spreading, my mouth is throbbing, and I'll probably lose my tooth
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after all because nobody's actually treating it, but at least the healthy ones are under
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constant surveillance.
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Okay, so this was my story, I made fun of it, but it's not funny.
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I mean, it's about wasting loads of money on a noble goal in all the wrong ways.
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But next week, October 14th, the vote will be cast in the EU, so it's high time to reach
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out to your MEP and ask their stance if they're undecided, or their motivation if they're
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in favor.
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Go to fightchatcontrol.eu if you live in Europe.
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And don't forget if you don't live in Europe, this will also impact you because we can
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create encryption in mainstream products, we'll spread, and the weekend encryption will
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be used everywhere.
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So fightchatcontrol.eu, reach out to your MEPs if you're living in Europe, and make some
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fuss about it, please, because this isn't important.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, as Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of
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a quick podcast, and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released on our Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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