From: merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 7251a534acac9ba152803d44ce28c989f119dcfa3ab0f995f9713d95cfa0f8d6
Message ID: <199411190336.AA14504@metronet.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-11-19 03:36:10 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 18 Nov 94 19:36:10 PST
From: merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 94 19:36:10 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: The Thread Thread
Message-ID: <199411190336.AA14504@metronet.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
>Fri, 18 Nov 1994, Tim May writes:
>>* A tiny thread cannot be readily detected by "airport scanners," nor
>>by even longer-distance scanners, unless the gain on the detector is
>>turned up so high that many other things trigger the detector.
>>
>>If the threads are mostly plastic, with discontiguous metallic writing
>>on them, then the detection problem is even harder.
>
>This is just a quick thought...does anyone know what kind of metallic ink
>is used? To add to the conspiracy theory, say the metallic ink is
>radioactive with a higher radiation count for higher dollar amounts--would
>it be implausible then to have some sort of radiation counter to gauge a
>person's total 'radiation count,' and thereby approximate how much currency
>they are carrying out of the country?
Wouldn't work. Radiation is useless for something like this - how to tell
the difference between X $20 bills, and Y $100 bills? The roentgen/hour
levels would be close enough to make knowing which is which virtually
impossible. Radiation is mostly good for yes/no type stuff, unless you're
dusting things with particular combinations of very specific isotopes and
sampling for them - in which case you've got a completely different set of
problems.
>
>I wouldn't take the above seriously though....
>
Seconded.
Dave Merriman
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1994-11-19 (Fri, 18 Nov 94 19:36:10 PST) - Re: The Thread Thread - merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)