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July 25, 2023 - Info Warrior - Jason Bermas
01:55:03
Your Digital Blockchain Slavery Device Is Here

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Time Text
Machine Minds, Human Hearts 00:01:48
We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in.
Machinery that gives abundance has left us in blunt.
We think too much and feel too little.
More than machinery.
We need humanity.
We know the air is unfit to breathe and our food is unfit to eat.
As if that's the way it's supposed to be.
We know things are bad, worse than bad.
They're crazy.
Ireland, the great and powerful are.
You've got to say, I'm a human being.
God damn it.
My life is safe.
You have met all the primal forces of nature.
Don't give yourselves to brutes.
Men who despise you, enslave you, who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think, or what to feel, who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fodder.
Don't give yourselves to these unnatural men.
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts.
Do not
give in to these machine monsters with machine minds and machine hearts.
Unnatural monsters.
Digital Slave Camps Exposed 00:15:04
That's where we're going with this one today.
You know, I rarely get up here and am blown away by what I'm about to talk about because so often the stuff I talk about is somewhat in the future.
And often I'm around when there's a launch of something so significant and so important that when I don't know about it as it's happening, and it is probably the most important story we may go over this year.
Believe it or not, like today's the day to share the program to everybody.
I just want you to know a lot of people today, they're going to be talking about Obama and they're going to be talking about this staffer that died on his property that broke yesterday, all that stuff.
Great peripheral stuff.
This affects every single human being on the planet.
And so yesterday was my birthday and went out to lunch and my buddy Mike, he just, he loves to stir it up.
He loves to stir it up afternoon.
And so I didn't really realize I was walking into a lunch with a bunch of people, which I did.
And I want to thank everybody that came out.
Now, among them is a gentleman who is very, very into crypto.
And I used to go to crypto club, you know, quite a bit.
I haven't been in quite some time just because, you know, that's another thing on the peripheral, especially with everything that crypto is going to utilize in smart contracts, blockchain, and your digital slavery.
I've always warned about these things, right?
In the future.
This is something I've been talking about for a decade now.
And yesterday was the day that all of that metastasized into the modern day Loch Mother Truckin' NAR.
And if you don't know what the Lochnar is, it is an orb of evil.
It is literally an orb of utter destruction.
Okay?
Divisiveness, viciousness, murder, darkness.
It is the Loch Nar.
And it is here.
It is amongst us now.
Today, people are trading in the Lochnar.
So what am I talking about?
Well, I'm sitting there.
And again, it's my birthday.
We're all eating chicken wings.
You know, Militich is jibing me.
We're talking.
And I talk to my buddy.
I go, so what's the crypto to invest in?
What's the next big one?
You know, because every few years, three to five years, the crypto market soars up.
It largely gets boosted.
And, you know, I want to be there for that 100 or thousand X coin.
And he goes, first he tries to push Doge on me.
I go, look, I'm not Muskernuts and I'm X. We're at X now.
Twitter's dead.
We're X.
The bird is gone.
X. Get ready.
It's all starting to get real weird, everybody.
And then he tells me about WorldCoin that launched yesterday.
WorldCoin.
Now, at first, I thought he was joking with me.
And why did I think he was joking with me?
Because he starts talking about WorldCoin.
And then he says, you know, it's by the guys that did chat GPT.
Okay, I'm with it.
I'm following.
I'm going there.
But then he says, it's going to be incorporated into an orb that is going to scan your eyeballs.
And the more eyeballs you scan to get digital ID verification biometrically that you're a human being for your safety, for your digital global safety, you're going to earn.
And I'm like, all right.
And he's kind of looking to the side.
I'm not sure if he's being real or not.
And then he says it's a UBI project, Universal Basic Income, the slavery system I've been talking about.
And I've been warning people that's already being utilized via your digital biometric identity that was beta tested all the way back in the war of terror in the Middle East, in Iraq and Afghanistan, scanning the citizens there, beta tested there, and then put into their world food program, which also runs on the blockchain.
Blockchain slavery camps.
They're real.
They call them refugee camps, blockchain slavery camps.
Say it with me.
So I'm like, all right, okay, Rediker.
All right.
You got me.
You think, yeah, ha ha ha, UBI.
And then he goes, no, man, I'm being dead serious.
I heard it on the way over here on my crypto podcast.
It launched today.
So he's like, you got a device?
Go ahead.
And as soon as I typed in the world coin and Sam Altman was next to it and I saw Orb, I was like, oh my God.
Oh my God.
So here it is.
The Lochnar itself.
I mean, could you make it more dystopian, please?
Could you make it more just, we're going to read this entire article at a coin desk.
I mean, it even starts with the Black Mirror stuff.
We're going to show you the ad.
They're all over the place.
But you have to understand, this is the culmination of Altman kind of being picked up into the hierarchy over at the Bilderberg meeting.
He's a builder, bro now, yo.
He's a builder, bro.
And AI is the next big thing.
And ChatGPT is doing the bidding of the Predator class.
I mean, this is the one to share with everybody today.
If you don't share the broadcast, you would need to talk about WorldCoin, how it is now on the market, how it is blockchain slavery, and how now they are incentivizing financially for people to go amongst others privately and take their biometric information.
I'm going to show you the first person in Hong Kong that's already done it.
They've already done it.
It's here.
This is it.
We're here now.
This isn't me talking about it, you know, on the Info Warrior in 2009 and people snickering.
And anybody snickering right now, I don't know what to tell you.
If this doesn't wake you up to what's about to go down, UBI means you are out.
You are a slave.
When you no longer have private ownership or the means to what?
Enable an acceleration in your life through private ownership, through private business, it's over.
It's over sauce with a side of told you so.
I don't know what is going on.
The orb.
This thing, if you looked at a model of it, okay?
It's like a cross between the Lochnar, which is this green glowing orb.
And in the second hour, when we're off of YouTube, and by the way, I pulled the first hour off of YouTube yesterday just in case.
You want to see it?
Rockfin, Rumble.
I'll post it on Twitter today.
I didn't post it on Twitter.
Or X. We'll post it on X today.
X. Thanks, Muskernuts.
Phantasm, the sphere, right?
Except for like burrowing into your eye socket and spewing blood out the other side.
It's just going to scan your digital information.
And you're going to scan your digital information.
So let's do it.
Let's just play the orb video that's out there.
And then you can actually watch.
And then we'll watch a slave, the first ever in Hong Kong, happily give up his biometrics to the digital slave grid.
Just volunteer.
That's where we're at.
Thank God it's not here yet.
Oh, they're going to try to bring it here, man.
It's not in the United States because of some laws.
But they're trying to pass laws that are going to just embrace this device, by the way.
Did they say Los Angeles is in there?
Did they stick Los Angeles in there?
Hold on.
Yep, they sure did, didn't they?
That was really quick.
Boom.
Yeah, they did.
So this is in LA?
Oh, my God.
Of course, why wouldn't it be?
Why wouldn't it be?
I see Mexico City.
Oh, my God.
He gets a world app.
Book an appointment for an orb near you.
This guy did.
Why is it repeating?
Oh, because I did the World Coin or thing twice.
Where's the digital slave man?
Oh, here he is.
He submits to slavery.
There's digital slave man.
Thumbs it up, subscribe, and share.
Let everybody know about this broadcast.
And let everybody know it's in.
Your UBI digital blockchain smart contract slavery is here.
It's this guy right here.
Now lift up, and open your eyes, and...
Is it loading?
Yes.
You'll get a token.
You get tokens too.
First of all, we got him!
We got him.
We don't need to hold it anymore.
No, no longer.
We no longer need to hold it.
No, it's over.
We got him.
I did it.
Oh, goodie.
Yay!
My app now works.
Okay, what are you trying to be finding humidity?
Oh, my God.
Did you get it?
Loading, loading.
Yeah, it's loading.
Verifying humidity.
They're verifying I'm a human being.
It's like he doesn't know he's human.
He needs some kind of validation through something out of a science fiction novel that looks like something out of witchcraft.
Am I the only one that's like, wow, they chose like the crystal ball theme too?
It's the Lochnar.
It's here.
World coin.
I do a month.
Is he going to tweak his nipples too?
What?
What the hell is going on?
Good job.
I'm verified.
I'm verified.
Nice.
Few things leave me so speechless.
What have you accomplished?
I mean, you don't have any really hair anymore, bro.
You got to be in your mid to late 20s, maybe early 30s.
I don't know.
Maybe if you're rocking it.
No, I'd say early 30s.
What have you accomplished in your life?
What relationships have you built?
The relationship with your digital slavery phone to be verified as human makes you that excited.
And look, that's a global phenomenon right now.
That's a global phenomenon.
I'm the first to be a slave.
So we're going to read this article.
We're going to show you the website.
We're going to show you the social media presence.
I didn't bring up the blockchain refugee video, but I'm going to have to find it.
Thumbs it up, subscribe, share.
Tell everybody about this broadcast, WorldCoin.
This is going to be the most important broadcast you watch today.
Maybe this week, depending on how much we get this out into the alternative media.
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Here's the deal, okay?
This is their own website.
And I want to say it again: Sam Altman got into the club this year, solidified by becoming a builder bro.
A builder bro on the cusp of AI at the top of the agenda.
Okay, Open AI, you have Microsoft, all the big players.
You got media players like Dauphner's, Axel Springer that are going AI.
The media organizations go AI.
Sam Altman's AI Agenda 00:13:35
So this is yet another incorporation of it.
We're now going beyond TrackTrace database.
I want to make that abundantly clear.
Okay.
The Track Trace database thing has been here for a very long time.
I've talked about it again and again and again and again.
And now the Internet of Things, which has already kind of triangulated your behavior, is becoming the Internet of Bodies.
So it can biologically follow you.
All right.
And incorporate you further into a slave grid system where all of your transactions must be verified and digital.
Whether they're monetary or a transaction to them would be a search query on the internet.
That's where this goes.
And that's the builder bro that's bringing it to you.
More than three years ago, we founded WorldCoin with the ambition of creating a new identity and financial network owned by everyone.
See, it's all about stakeholder capitalism and the benevolence of all this technology.
And Altman's not greedy.
He loves you.
He wants to make the world a better place.
The rollout begins today.
If successful, we believe WorldCoin could drastically increase economic opportunity, scale a reliable solution for distinguishing humans from AI online while preserving privacy.
No, that's all a bunch of Johnny nonsense.
This is an acclimation project.
Okay.
At the very least, it's an acclimation project.
You see, it doesn't necessarily have to succeed on every level.
It's kind of a beta test.
They've already done, like I said, you look at the refugee program with the World Bank and the IMF and it being promoted at Davos, the World Economic Forum.
That's kind of the alpha.
This is beta.
This is into the public arena.
How many slaves will line up for their slavery?
That's what they want to know.
So, look, if enough people adapt it or adopt it, then it will continue.
But even if it fails, it's going to have so much vital data out there for the predator class to move on what's next.
All right.
Enable global democratic processes.
That's a total lot.
See, we're in the post-truth world now.
That's an inversion of reality.
What it really will enable is a system, okay, in which authoritarians dictate what happens and then gaslight you and say you're anti-democracy because they actually have the data on how you voted, right?
The outcome is already predetermined.
But if you keep voting a certain way against them and you become a problem and a threat, they have your biometrics.
They got your heartbeat and eventually show a potential path to AI-funded UBI.
In other words, total and complete automated slavery financially and socially for the vast majority of humanity.
UBI means it's over for us.
Okay, I don't want your government dole.
I don't want your technopoly.
I don't want your transhumanism.
Period.
And this is the road to all of it.
Worldcoin consists of privacy-preserving digital identity.
A total and complete lie.
Anything digital is not privacy-preserving.
It's forever.
It's forever.
It's in a database somewhere.
Data is cheap.
Man, I wish I had a little micro SD card, but everybody knows everybody's got one on their phone.
They're the size of a nano sim.
And right now, I can buy one that has a terabyte commercially, has a terabyte capacity, a terabyte.
You know, whether you believe scientists or not, they say that your entire brain, if you live to be like 90, only has like a nine terabyte capacity.
So if you took just the SD cards and stacked them like that, nine terabytes is nothing.
Nothing.
And again, that's been commercially available for how long?
So if you don't think they're going to keep all of your data and you need everything, you're being naive.
You're being naive.
So this is your world ID.
And remember, we're in the new world order now.
It's not like they were going to come out with a big flag and say, new world order, we did it.
No, we bent the knee to global governance on a massive scale through the World Health Organization.
It's now been established.
All right, we're in it.
They believe that they're the winning team and they're up 20 to 2.
It's the bottom of the eighth.
That's how they're looking at this.
I wish that weren't the case.
But this should let you know.
They got orbs.
They got orbs that they're going to incorporate your biometric digital nightmare to.
Awesome.
Just, I can't wait.
So, where laws allow a digital currency received simply for being human.
You're just you, bro.
Stakeholder capitalism.
You're just, this is the internet of bodies right here.
Yo, it's okay just to be you.
What are you identifying as?
Doesn't matter.
I mean, you don't even really have to identify as being human.
You just have to give up your biometric data.
Believe me, that's down the road.
Trans species.
We hope that where the rules are less clear, such as in the U.S., steps will be taken so more people can benefit from both.
So right now, the rules aren't so clear, but somehow they have Los Angeles and their little app.
Ad, it's pretty rough.
You can now download World App, the first protocol compatible wallet, and reserve your share.
After visiting an orb, a biometric verification device, you will receive a world ID.
This lets you prove you are a real and unique person online while remaining completely private.
Yeah, right.
As the global distribution of orbs is ramping up, global, I mean, dude, I feel like it's like a street fighter character that just like comes up out of the ground, the orbs like are just circling him into it, just flings him out in the world, and then they come together in the giant Lochnar formation.
Just one giant orb.
You can find the closed one and book time to be verified with the worldapp and worldcoin.org.
WorldCoin is an attempt at a global scale alignment.
Global scale alignment.
The journey will be challenging and the outcome is uncertain.
But finding new ways to broadly share the coming technological prosperity is a critical challenge of our time.
We hope you'll join us.
No, this is slavery.
This is straight, and I don't know.
Let's see who Alex Blaine is.
You know, I don't know who everybody is.
Again, I did, for shame.
I had no idea that digital orb slavery was launching yesterday.
No clue.
So let me see what this guy looks like.
This guy?
Oh, he's friendly.
He's friendly, right?
And by the way, that's a Snowden orb.
Bitcoin news.
So there they are right there.
Edges closer.
I just.
Let's read the Coindesk article.
That's all I can say.
You know, I'm really interested to see what is because this is extensive.
Okay.
Let's see if they're just raving over it.
Because I've got some clips.
You know, I want to talk.
I mean, they talk about democratic processes.
And I want to show you clips from 2000 and 2004 when people were like, hey, these machines are doing weird things.
Now here we are 20 plus years later and the machines don't even seem to be part of the conversation.
Forget about like actual audits, but the machines use themselves.
No, no, no.
You're not allowed to even speak about that.
Okay?
Thumbs it up, subscribe, and share.
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Okay.
I want this info out there.
I'm not trying to hold back when it comes to a subject like orbs and world coin or any other subject that is important.
And I like to think that it's all killer-no-filler here.
You know, even when we're having fun and we're joking around, we're taking a little light, the topics at hand actually matter.
You know?
And that's another thing.
You look at that guy, okay?
Before we get reading this, we're going to go off on another little reality rant here.
You look at that guy and how unbelievably elated he is that he's now part of the digital slavery grid and that he's been verified to be human on his little magic box, right?
What kind of pride does he take in anything that he does, let alone his work, right?
You know, yesterday, I had somebody who, again, is a constant nihilistic cynic, but at the same time loves to prop themselves up.
Okay, like they're the best thing since breakfast on the issue of 9-11 in particular.
And he's taken jabs at me for years.
I'm not even going to have his name come out of my mouth.
But I've met him personally.
He's an unhappy person.
He doesn't have a lot going on in life.
Okay.
It's sad.
I feel bad for him.
But without watching any of my stuff, with simply seeing a thumbnail, you know, this is Red Voice Media.
The other thing I wear a suit asked me if I was a quote-unquote Trump supporter then or now.
And I said no.
However, I voted for him twice.
And then I said, had I been given a better option, like a Kucinich, an RFK Jr. even at the time, I probably would have went that way.
But I thought he was better than the alternative.
Okay.
So then he can't wait to jump back in.
And everybody knows that's my honest opinion from the very beginning.
I wasn't going to vote for Hillary Clinton in 2016.
I would have much rather had Rand Paul.
He's not perfect either.
But at the same time, I couldn't vote for Gary Johnson, who I had interviewed for Infowars many years ago.
Why not?
Why couldn't I vote for him?
He didn't understand the Syrian conflict or where Aleppo was, and he was pushing the climate garbage.
So yeah, I unapologetically voted for Trump both times.
So then he asks about Saudi Arabia and, oh, you believed he was going to tell on the Saudis.
I go, I never believed anything.
And I'm one of the first guys that was talking about that 400-plus billion arms deal he did with them.
So I'm like, you don't watch my stuff.
Just stop commenting.
Okay.
And to his credit, he's like, well, don't take offense.
I don't watch anybody's stuff.
Well, then why are you talking, man?
Why do you just assume you know what I think?
I think Trump was a failure on 9-11.
JFK, Assange, Solomani, Syria.
Discussed them at length every time.
Mattis, more.
When the guy did good things, like I had more money in my wallet and he wasn't starting new wars of aggression, I was pretty happy about that.
There's a lot I could go on back and forth on the guy, but that's just reality, man.
You know, but this is reality rants.
We're going to take a break.
We're going to come back.
We're going to read about WorldCoin and the Lochnar after this.
We interrupt today's programming to bring unfortunate news.
Biden's dangerous plan for a digital dollar is underway.
Don't be fooled.
It won't benefit you.
Beware of Digital Dollar 00:02:55
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Woo!
I'm on fire today.
I'm on fire.
And look, I am a happy guy.
I'm just going to, I'm going to lay it out.
I will not let these people destroy my happiness.
Ignorance, I'll say it again.
Ignorance is not bliss.
Lies don't make friends.
And people better know what's going on.
And I try to do everything here and everything in my life that I can with an upbeat attitude.
Does that mean I'm not a cockface McGraw sometimes?
For sure.
For sure.
I can be a dick.
Even in my personal life, I'm a little rough with people sometimes, they say.
They're not used to it.
You know, I just, I got a lot of text messages yesterday.
This was my birthday.
And growing up in just this little town, upstate New York, I talk about it sometimes.
Amish people around the corner was just there.
Me and my friends were pretty vicious to each other.
We were the kind of people that just couldn't wait to get one liners in and just crush the other person.
Now, there was all love underneath.
Every once in a while, we take it a little too far.
But, you know, I got a text from my friend Heidi.
Shout out to Heidi.
And I think we're like a week apart on birthdays.
You know, she's got a beautiful family.
I love hearing from her.
And that's like kind of the first thing I thought.
And actually, my buddy Matt, too.
When those guys text me, I think about when we were kids and just, man, we couldn't wait.
We couldn't wait to dig at the other one and make the rest of the group laugh.
Retinal Tracking Debate 00:12:45
You know what I mean?
And a lot of it, again, some of it was mean-spirited.
I'm not going to lie.
That's growing up.
But it's all in good nature.
And especially even yesterday, like I thought, I thought, I thought Rediker was busting my balls about WorldCoin.
It's where we're bringing this back to.
Because we're all sitting there.
You know, my one buddy who set it up just like plowed through the chips in queso like a madman.
So we're having words back and forth.
And I'm thinking that he's busting my balls.
Hell no.
It's Lochnar Orbs.
So let's do it.
Let's read this article.
Again, thumbs it up, subscribe, share.
Let people know the Lochnar is here.
I've traveled to Berlin to stare into the future.
Or more accurately, I've traveled to Berlin to stare, literally stare into a device that some see as our best hope for taming and perhaps harnessing the future powers of artificial intelligence.
My God.
Others see that same device as a black mirror episode sprung to life designed to track and control us.
Duh!
No, do you think?
Well, thanks for throwing that sentence in there.
I'm staring into quote unquote, the orb.
The orb.
By the way, guys, second hour, you're going to want, especially if you've never seen anything heavy metal or know about the Lochnar, you're going to want to come over to the second hour, RVMrumble.com.
And again, yesterday, we pulled the first hour from YouTube, RVMrumble.com.
Did I mention RVMrumble.com?
I mean, they run an entire network now until 8:30 p.m.
You know what I mean?
We're 9 to 11, almost 12 hours of content.
Just point it out there.
Just saying.
The orb is about the size of a bowling ball.
It's chrome and shiny and smooth.
I'm instructed to move closer and stare into a black circle, like how you peer into a machine at the optometrists.
The orb then uses a system of infrared cameras, sensors, and AI-powered neural networks to scan my iris and verify that yes, in fact, I am being, I am a human being.
Now, in my film Invisible Empire, I have the retinal scans in the Middle East, but I just want to show people retinal scans, war on terror.
Let's see what we get here.
Let's see, see what we got.
Right there.
I mean, in fact, I think I used that picture from that article from that's 2011.
In fact, I know I did because I've seen that movie many times and I made it.
Now, whether or not they use that, so none of this is new.
They didn't need to make it into an orb, obviously.
That's, I mean, I mean, they've been doing this for so long, and now you'll get crypto.
And by the way, the USFC is the biometric device.
So it's all there.
This was the alpha.
Now we're in the beta.
This was the alpha.
Now we're in the beta.
I mean, if I went to all, okay, and I went to news, and let's do a sort by let's do custom range.
Let's go 01, 01, 2000.
Okay, and we'll go to about 2008.
How about that?
01, 01, 2008.
Boom.
Pentagon to merge next-gen binoculars with soldiers' brains.
I mean, that's what we got.
Those are the type of things we get right there with retinal scans and war on terror.
Forget about just the biometric scanning.
You know what I mean?
What is this?
I don't want a free tour.
Go back to.
See, they're always trying to screw you here.
I mean, right there, guys.
I mean, the human brain interface thing is real.
The retinal scan is run by the military.
All right.
Sam Altman is an extension of the military-industrial complex right now.
You better believe it.
That's what this is.
He's staring into the orb.
And I'm hardly the first to do this.
No, you're not.
There are now over 2 million humans who have stared into the orb, the flagship device from WorldCoin, the Crypto Meets AI project, co-founded by Sam Altman and Alex Blamia, who is now the CEO of parent company Tools for Humanity.
Oh, it's and I talk about it.
Technology is a tool, okay?
But this hammer is bashing you over the head.
It ain't building you nothing, building you a slave grid.
WorldCoin has an audacious premise.
AI will continue to improve and eventually evolve into AGI, advanced general intelligence, meaning it's smarter than humans, the singularity.
That will spur leaps in productivity.
This will create wealth.
Instead of that wealth being snatched by elites, yes, because you know, Sam Altman didn't just meet with a bunch of quote-unquote elites behind closed doors and business interests and people pushing the great reset agenda and pushing sustainable living.
He didn't just do that.
No, no, no.
He's protecting us from the people he just met with behind closed doors.
It should be fairly distributed to all of humanity, Klaus Nuchwab style, stakeholder capitalism style.
Literally everyone has a form of UBI or universal basic income, which will empower billions.
That UBI will come in the form of a cryptocurrency.
That crypto is world coin.
The merits of UBI have resonated with Altman for years.
UBI is interesting to me, even without talking about AI.
Altman says in a recent Zoom interview, it's an idea that appeals to a lot of people.
If we have a society rich enough to support poverty, it doesn't end poverty.
Then we have a moral obligation to find out how to do that.
That's not how to do that.
That's an enslavement grid.
So maybe the magic of AI can succeed where the mud of politics has failed.
In a world of AI, universal basic income is even more important for the obvious reasons, Altman says, who added he still expects there to be jobs in a post-AI world.
But A, I do think we're going to need some sort of cushion through the transition.
And B, part of the whole reason of being excited about AI is it's more material-abundant world.
Do you work more or less now?
Do you have more or less?
Do you think they're going to give you more material abundance?
Do you think you're getting a better house, a better car?
Is that what they have planned for you?
What alterverse are we living in that you would buy into this bull snap?
World coin, following this logic, could be the key.
It could be the key to unlocking that abundance.
Oh, baby.
But there's a catch.
Of course, there's a catch.
If the goal is to freely give out tokens to everyone in this AI-enabled future, how can we be sure we're handing out the loot to a human and not an AI-powered fake?
It's only a matter of time before AI can laugh at CAPTCHA.
Or what if bad actors use AI to create multiple wallets and game the system?
They're going to game the system.
And guess what?
Your biometric retinal scan isn't really that safe either because they will make eventually you will be able to produce an actual biological retina that can be scanned.
So, I mean, when we talk about printing organs and things like that, like that's all, that's like Rothblatt, right?
We talk about xenotransplantation, those things.
There will be ways to game the system.
I promise you that.
Out of the gates.
In fact, don't be surprised if once you have somebody's retinal information, you could print an eyeball identical with that retinal information.
I'm not saying that that's going to be commercially available for everybody, but would it say be, I don't know, available to a three-letter agency or a black project?
Hmm.
Jason, that sounds like a conspiracy theory.
Meanwhile, we got Lochnor orbs in the world right now with a cryptocurrency smart contract to ensure your blockchain slavery.
Lovely.
Lovely.
The team thought about the problem.
They thought about all the ways humans could prove they're actually human.
And after considering all the options, they came to a wrenching conclusion.
They don't like it.
See, they didn't like it.
We don't like it.
We really didn't want to do this.
Want, want, want.
We know it's going to be painful.
It's going to be expensive.
People think it's weird.
They decide they had no choice.
It was unsettling and controversial.
And the optics are literally the stuff of nightmares.
But they thought it had to be done.
They needed to verify humanity with biometric data.
We didn't want to do it.
We had to do it.
Blania is talking, of course, about the orb.
For a number of reasons, we didn't want to go down that path.
So we decided to make the device as dystopian as possible.
But it really was the only solution.
This is the untold story of that solution and a journey to discover if it's a solution or a problem.
Oh, that's the journey.
Don't worry, they're going to take us on a journey.
Can we get even close to 100 thumbs up over on YouTube?
Can we get a little bit of traction?
Can we get a little bit of love?
Can I let you know that RVMrumble.com is going to have this second hour?
Because we got to go to our sponsor.
We're going to come back to the last segment of the first hour.
You're looking at the modern day Lochnar, and it's the real deal, Holyfield, folks.
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Woo!
Orb's Wondrous Data Collection? 00:13:51
And we are back.
It is reality, Rance.
I am Jason Burmese, and today is a wild one.
It is, it's one of those ones where you take a step back and you say, damn.
You just say, I can't believe I'm reading this.
I can't believe this is happening.
It's here, and I can't believe how dystopic they decide to go with it.
The orb is sleek and minimalist with no visible controls or knobs.
It looks like something you'd buy in an Apple store.
That's not a coincidence.
As the orb's lead designer is Thomas Mayerhoffer, who was Johnny Ives' first hire at Apple.
Lovely.
Ive is the legendary designer of the iMac iPod and iPhone.
Oh, the orb was meant to evoke simplicity.
It must be simple enough to speak to all of us, everyone around the world, Mayor Hoffer once said.
In the Berlin office, Blania shows me older models of the orb and tells me stories of the company's early days.
When they first tinkered with the hardware, the idea was originally conceived as the Bitcoin project with the goal of freely distributing Bitcoin to people once they prove their humanity.
Blania holds up an older version and chuckles.
It has a slot and spits out physical coins almost like a reverse piggy bank.
It has two eyeballs and a mouth.
Those early orbs just didn't cut it.
Let's be honest.
The early orbs even talk to you.
The thing screams at you in a robot voice.
Blania remembers now amused by the nostalgia.
He explains that each of the early orbs could hold 15 physical coins, which contained the keys to actual Bitcoin.
And the idea was that people would take the cryptocurrency more seriously if they held something in their hand.
The team soon scuttled this idea for obvious reasons.
We just tried so many things, said Blania.
Such a making of the orb vibrate when it told you something.
Every week, they cranked out a new version of the orb using 3D printers to quickly iterate.
Blania, tall, athletic, baby-faced 29-year-old, wearing jeans and a t-shirt.
He's so hot right now.
He's so hip.
He's an unlikely CEO.
He leads one of the most ambitious projects on the planet, but this happens to be his very first job.
Altman tapped him to be the CEO and co-founder after his stint at Caltech, where he researched neural networks and theoretical physics.
Blania admits that in the beginning, other than technical depth, I think I was a bad CEO.
So Altman gave him help.
Sam basically gave me a couple of people that I met with every week, he says.
They basically told me every week the ways in which I was doing a bad job.
One of these CEO coaches was Matt Mockery, who had previously coached both Altman and Brian Armstrong.
I wonder, or Mo Cherry, Mocheri, I don't know who he is.
I'm sure that guy has some really interesting connections.
That's all I'll say.
They torture or they tutored him on the managerial basis, like how to conduct one-on-ones, how to run staff meetings, and how to handle public speaking.
Blania has no hobbies unless you're counting weightlifting and meditating.
He splits his time between San Francisco and Berlin, Tools for Humanities, two main office.
And when in Berlin, he starts his day at 9 a.m., leaves the office at 10 p.m., and then hits the gym.
I try to work every waking hour.
I mean, they're not propping this up right now.
They're not promoting this.
I mean, he's a hard-working man.
He's a hard-working man.
The work includes leading 50 full-time employees, and some were tasked with creating a new crypto wallet from scratch.
The crypto user experience is very rough, says Tiego Sada, head of product and engineering, who I also meet in Berlin in the Berlin office.
Seda is yet another genius.
There's a lot of those in the AI circles.
Everyone's a genius.
It's magic.
He grew up in Mexico and built robots with his friends when he was 14 years old and launched a Venmo for Mexico startup.
And later met Altman at the Y Combinator Incubator.
The Y Combinator Incubator.
Sounds like something out of the Silicon Valley series.
That's what that sounds like.
SATA was initially skeptical of crypto because, in his view, it was hard to get non-technical people to easily sign up.
When he asked people to do things like download a MetaMask extension, they were lost.
Sure, crypto wallets were effective for the crypto curious, but they were a non-starter for many of the planet's 8 billion people.
And a core idea of WorldCoin is to get cryptocurrency to everyone easily, regardless of their tech savvy.
Hmm.
Yeah, because we'll have all your biometric data.
We'll have a track trace database under your skin, son.
Don't worry.
Now you're in the cryptoverse.
Now you're tokenized.
Yeah.
Something they could do without complications, something they could do literally in the blink of an eye.
Ha ha ha.
Get it?
So they built World App, which syncs to the orb and allows for near instant onboarding.
I tried it out myself in the Berlin office.
I downloaded the World app from the App Store.
The app synced to the orb, which sat on a conference room table.
I had imagined the orb would be sitting on some pedestal in the throne room.
Alas.
Seconds later, I stared into the shiny globe.
My account was verified.
And I was now the proud owner of one world coin.
We did it.
I got a token.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This would not have been possible had I tried it in the U.S. where they are not rolling out tokens, at least not yet, for regulatory reasons.
The onboarding process, at least for me, was buttery smooth.
It was easily the most frictionless crypto onboarding I've experienced in my five plus years covering the space.
If you're willing to overlook the whole scanning the eyeball thing, yeah, more on that in a bit, I bet.
I mean, it's buttery smooth.
I couldn't wait to give up my info.
It's buttery smooth.
The onboarding process, at least for me, I mean, I just am, I want to throw up.
One reason the tech works so smoothly is an embrace of AI and the paradox of AI is everywhere.
The potential consequences of AI, both wondrous productivity gains and malicious deepfakes.
See, you know, deep fakes aren't always malicious.
And I hate that it's being presented that way.
I mean, don't get me wrong, they pose a big issue.
A big, issue.
And productivity gains, depending on where they are and how they affect humanity, aren't necessarily wondrous.
They could be malicious.
Right?
So what do I mean by that?
Well, if you have a productivity gain and more cost-effectiveness via, I don't know, printed drones and their networks that are hooked through Starlink or some other satellite system, well, that's going to enslave humanity, isn't it?
That's not so great.
And we're paying for that, right?
So the productivity gain is not wondrous.
It's wondrous for the predator class that wants to keep us at heel.
They fuel the company's mission, but on a more day-to-day basis.
The recent gains in AI have made the engineers more efficient.
WorldCoin would not be possible without AI, says SATA.
Multiple machine learning models help power the guts of the orb, and SATA says the AIs have, in effect, begun to train other AIs, further supercharging their productivity.
So how do AIs train AIs?
People think we need a lot of data to train the algorithms, said SATA.
Actually, what a lot of these models allow us to do is generate synthetic data.
Just as you can use AI image generation Dolly to create an image of Luke Skywalker dunking a basketball in the style of Caravaggio and it comes back in seconds, the engineers can use AI to create data simulations.
That allows us to use significantly less data, says SATA.
That's why we're able, by default, to delete everyone's biometric and iris data.
Yeah.
I'm sure because they don't want it.
We're going to just delete it.
We're going to get rid of it.
Come on.
Come on.
Again, this is a beta test acclimation project.
How many people will sign up for their blockchain digital control grid slavery?
That's what this is.
That brings us to the uncomfortable question that has dogged WorldCoin since its inception.
Just what exactly is WorldCoin doing with these eyeball scans?
As soon as Altman unveiled the orb via Twitter in October of 2021, critics and skeptics pounced.
Don't catalog eyeballs, admonished Edward Snowden in a tweet thread.
Don't use biometrics for anti-fraud.
In fact, don't use biometrics for anything.
Snowden acknowledged that the project used zero-knowledge proofs to preserve privacy, but insisted: great, clever, still bad.
The human body is not a ticket punch.
As my CoinDesk colleagues David Z. Morris wrote, it's speculatory and inherently risky for a private company to gather this kind of biometric data about everyone on earth.
And that, by the way, calling the device the orb with heavy overtones of the eye of Sauron is creepy as hell.
Badingo, badongo.
Yes, it is.
But again, it's the Lochnar.
However, if you look at the thumbnail, you know, this is like other than me showing the guy doing the orb thing, that's like their legit logo.
Like they're letting you know it's digital slavery time.
It's digital slavery time.
Digital slavery time.
Woo-woo.
Blania, Satta, and others from WorldCoin conveyed to me many, many times that the orb is not collecting biometric data from the eyeballs, or at least not unless the user explicitly allows it.
Privacy is a fundamental human right.
We've heard that before.
Again and again and again at forums at the World Economic Forum and you know hearings.
We've heard that before.
It's a fundamental human right.
Every part of the WorldCoin system has been carefully designed to defend it without compromise.
We don't want to know who you are, just that you are unique.
Reads the company's privacy statement.
Sure.
That said, some data is captured if the user allows it.
The default setting is to not capture data.
Users can change this and allow it to be stored, which WorldCoin says it's used for the narrow purpose of improving its algorithm.
Why users would go out of the way to enable this is beyond me.
You'll see why.
Because it'll be in some backdoor privacy thing that you've already signed up for later on.
That will become the default.
After they got, you know, they've already got 2 million people.
Let them get 25 million.
And then the new terms of service will be there, and you'll just hit yes.
And that'll be on default.
Whoa, I didn't know I did that.
I didn't know.
And that's just one of the ways.
Come on.
The really cool thing and the really hard thing, says Santa, is that the orb handles all of its calculations and verifications locally to vet that you are a unique human and then it generates a unique iris code.
Think of your world ID as a passport in that lovely.
I'll have your medical information.
We love the kind of passports that have been put out there recently and the kind of restrictions regarding those passports.
That's what I love.
And I want that to be hooked to a system that has my biometric data on it.
That's what I want.
Think of your world ID as a passport, says Santa.
And all the orb does is stamp that passport to say it's valid.
He stresses again that no map of the eyeball is captured.
It's just a code that says you're a unique human, not your age or race or gender or eye color.
Don't worry.
Pretty bird.
Pretty bird.
On the day of WorldCoin's public launch, Ethereum creator Vitalik Burchin wrote a detailed blog post that integrated, it claims, interrogated the claims of its privacy.
Good.
We got one more break.
Worldcoin's Biometric Passport 00:02:41
I'm going to come back really quickly and tell you where you can watch that second hour back after this.
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And by the way, they want to get rid of VPNs.
You want to watch that second hour?
It's over at rvmrumble.com, RVMrumble.com.
We got plenty more on this article.
And guess what's next?
We got a little heavy metal coming your way.
Here, Vermyrtel, very excited for that.
You'll get to meet the Lochnar up close and personal.
So YouTube, we'll see you later and we'll get ready for some Lochnar action.
So with that being said, let's see.
There's the heavy metal trailer.
What do I want to do?
I want to do the trailer and then I want to show you the discovery of the Lochnar.
Now, like, it's kind of an anthology series.
And this Lochnar is there, like in the very beginning, to try to scare this little girl, right?
And I want to give it away and what it's all about and why, you know, how it kind of circles back to the girl at the end.
But the Lochnar is the orb of evil.
So get ready for some heavy metal.
Columbia Pictures presents heavy metal.
A trip beyond the future to a universe you've never seen before.
A universe of mystery.
A universe of passionate fantasies.
A universe of terrifying evil.
A universe of magic.
Heavy metal.
I'm the science fiction.
Destroyer of Worlds 00:02:45
Now.
Now, I saw that movie when I was like, I don't know, nine or 10 years old.
Totally and completely inappropriate.
If you're going to watch this, make sure your kids at least a teenager, if they're going to watch it with you.
There's something about this old school art style, but here it is, the Lochnar man, the orb of evil, telling you how it was rediscovered.
My power invests all time, all galaxies, all dimensions, but many still seek me out.
A green jewel they must possess, but see how I destroy their lives.
Destroyer of worlds throughout all time.
Lockknock.
Right?
12 degrees.
Yet, so many seek it out.
So many seek the orb of power.
And now the modern-day Lochnar is here.
I mean, the really cool thing is, yeah, okay.
So, again, Ethereum creator challenged and interrogated the claims of privacy.
He flagged concerns, but gave it decent marks.
Okay.
On the whole, despite the dystopian vibes of staring into an orb and letting it scan deeply into your eyeballs, it does seem like specialized hardware systems can do quite a decent job of protecting your privacy, included.
Election Night Anomalies 00:04:32
However, the flip side of this is that specialized hardware systems introduced much greater centralization concerns.
Hence, we cyberpunks seem to be stuck in a bind.
We have the trade-off of one deeply held cyberpunk value against another.
In other words, it's not open source.
It's not open source.
Let me show you what happens when things aren't open source.
Okay.
They talked about this being some kind of a tool for democracy.
Really?
A tool for democracy.
so.
Back in 2000, Al Gore lost the presidential election in Florida, amongst the chaos and arguments over how to recount the votes.
But no one thought to ask how the computers originally counted the results.
As dusk fell on election night, one official noticed something very strange.
A sign that the heart of America's democracy was in danger.
In Volusia County, Florida, an election computer counted Al Gore's totals backwards.
Oh!
He had negative votes.
It's a little weird.
We're showing a minus sign in front of the votes that it had subtracted from Gore.
I mean, it wasn't like it was trying to hide it.
It says there's minus 16,022 votes here.
How could a computer that is supposed to protect the votes of you and me count backwards to give a candidate negative votes?
Either it was an error or someone had tried to rig the election.
Hmm.
Hmm.
I wonder.
Maybe an error or hmm.
Hmm.
Hey, you know what?
It's a little weird that this also happened, eh?
There was an investigation into the negative votes, and it was established that the problem couldn't have been due to machine failure because only the totals for the presidential race were affected.
It looked like a second memory card may have been loaded onto the computer.
Memory cards contained the votes, but this second card had disappeared, so they couldn't check it.
The origin of the negative votes was never proved, but some engineers thought that it might have been an attempt to tamper with the election.
But no one will ever know for sure.
The software that counted those votes is a trade secret owned by the Diebold Corporation.
It's against federal and state law to look inside Diebold's voting machines.
Huh.
Interesting.
I've been talking about that for a while.
Here's another little Klipskian hutch.
Maybe we should talk about 2004.
How does e-voting, electronic voting work and who controls the controls on it?
Well, that's the key.
The electronic voting machines are owned by private corporations, which are Republican in orientation generally.
And the courts have ruled that the source code on these electronic voting machines is proprietary.
So even the governments that buy or lease these machines have no access to a final verification process.
Even Ronald Reagan said, trust but verify.
And we know that the vote count was flipped in 2004.
We know it was flipped in Volucia County in 2000.
Where is Volucia County?
In Florida, when Al Gore basically was the rightful winner and George W. Bush won the election.
And they were electronic voting machines?
In Volucia County, they were, yes.
In the southern part of Florida, they used butterfly ballots, as you'll recall.
The only good thing we can say about George W. Bush is that the American people never actually elected him president.
And we're looking now at 2016, an election that will be very easily flipped in those six keys.
So again, you know, in 2016, clearly they thought that they had it rigged for Hillary.
He just won in that big of a landslide.
If they had audited that election, there would have been no argument about who got the popular vote.
In fact, when they started doing an audit with Jill Stein, that's what happened.
And this is why you don't want these digital demons anywhere near your election process.
WorldID As Skeleton Key 00:15:23
Okay, no matter how safe they think it is or they say it is.
I mean, this is insane.
Once users have their world ID, which WorldCoin insists is privacy preserving, it can be used in the future as a sort of skeleton key to access other apps and websites such as Twitter or Chat GPT.
See, this is your internet ID that's biologically entrenched in you.
It's beyond the track trace database society that we already live under.
So, again, you want to look into certain things.
They're going to know it every single time.
They can't wait until they can read your mind because that's out there too.
In fact, everybody talks about, you know, and I do too, these human-brain interfaces that they want, the chips they want to put into you.
Well, that's to internalize the technology.
The technology already exists, that you don't need to internalize it, but they want it there all the time, every time, so you don't have a choice.
This is not about freedom of choice.
Okay, this is about getting you to acquiesce or openly choose slavery.
Like, like the guy we should, let's show him again.
Look, show that we're gonna shut it off and just kind of play the thing in the background, and maybe we'll play the audio again.
This guy is super excited to become a slave, he cannot wait.
Now, lift up, you scan your phone.
I mean, look at him.
He literally grabs his chest afterwards.
He's so excited.
He grabs, they verify I'm human.
Yay!
Yay!
It's maddening.
We don't need to hold it anymore.
No, no longer.
We no longer need to hold it.
No, it's over.
Now we're just going to verify it.
Oh, he grabbed.
Oh!
Oh!
Okay, what are you grabbing?
Very fighting humidity.
I mean, again, verifying humanity.
Just prove I'm a human.
He can't.
Successful verification!
Good job.
I'm verified!
Good job.
It's like a pavlob.
Good job, doggy.
Yeah, I'm verified human.
Just wow.
Wow.
Block, chain, slavery, and the locknar are here.
They're already dabbling with this functionality.
World ID recently announced integration with Okta and German Identity and Access Management Provider.
And more partnerships are in the works.
They are cutting the internet off from you.
They are going to ensure they know what you are watching and your reaction to it.
World ID is a form of self-sovereign identity.
I did a deep dive on SSID a while back, which is itself a holy grail for many in the Web3 space.
In the rosy and best case scenario, the orb could enable the scaling of SSID and UBI to billions of people.
Because we want to scale UBI to billions of people.
We want billions of people to literally be enslaved by the government and their rules of global governance through a digital tokenized system, wrestling online identity from the centralized corporate Titans and help give poor, marginalized communities greater access to financial empowerment.
That's the vision.
That's the cover story.
That's the bull shizzle.
That's what that is.
But who pays for this?
The way the system is currently configured, once you've signed up for the orb, every week you can claim one world coin.
That's the early colonel of UBI who's footing the bill for this token that will suddenly appear in the wallets or eyeballs of everyone on the planet.
On the one hand, sure, there's precedent for cryptocurrency that enters the world as if by magic and then eventually accrues value.
Exhibit a Bitcoin.
Then again, a part of a Bitcoin's values proposition is that it's scarce with a cap supply of 21 million.
Jesse Walden, an early investor in the project and general partner at Variant, acknowledges that who pays is a good question to ask, but says, I don't know that there's a single definitive answer right now or that there needs to be.
The way he sees it, most startups don't have a business model figured out at the beginning.
Excuse me.
And they typically focus on growth and the growth of the network eventually begets use cases and value.
Altman has a more pragmatic answer.
In the short term, Altman says the hope is that the people want to buy this token because they believe this is the future.
There will be an inflows into the economy.
New token buyers is how it gets paid for effectivity or for effectively.
So he's saying, those that invest in other people's slavery, get ready, buckle up.
We're taking WorldCoin to the moon.
If you're feeling less charitable, you could view that just as another flavor of number go up crypto speculation.
Correct.
The long-term and grander vision, of course, is that the fruits of AGI will confer financial rewards that can be bestowed upon humanity, hence the name of WorldCoin's parent company, Tools for Humanity.
How that happens is anyone's guess.
Eventually, you can imagine the sort of things in the post-AGI world, Altman says.
But we have no specific plans for that.
That's not what this is about at this phase.
So again, give us all your identity.
We'll give you this magic token so we can track, trace, database, everything you do and act like you're safe.
And then ensure you're a human being on the internet.
Well, we track trace and database everything you do.
But we're not going to do that.
But here's your token.
It's your UBI token.
You've got a token.
It's programmable.
There are few people on the planet who are better equipped to envision a post-AGI world than Altman, who sits at a curious intersection between these two AI projects.
He's arguably the most central player in the development of AI, and he's now the co-founder of a project intended, at least in part, to serve as a check on the demons of AI.
No, it's to empower the demons of AI.
These, these fly, I mean, this guy signed up.
What's he supposed to write about or think?
He literally, this guy writing this bent the knee to the Lochnar.
Although he doesn't see it like that.
I get the appeal of framing the story as creating the problem here, solving the problem there.
That's not how I think about it, he says.
Here's the way he frames it.
The world is going to get driven forward as the world gets driven forward.
The playing field shifts.
And there are a whole bunch of things that should happen, but it's not like problem solution.
No, it's problem reaction solution.
Then the problem is that we still have money and we still have freedom and we still have property ownership.
And, you know, we still can say that our elections are rigged when they're rigged.
Right.
And we can still fight back against that.
We can still speak at our school boards.
We can still do things.
We still have guns.
That's the problem for them.
It's more like a co-evolving ecosystem.
I don't think of it as one response to the other.
I'll be the first to admit that Altman can run circles around me intellectually, and he strikes me as an earnest and well-intentioned.
But I do find this answer befuddling.
It does, in fact, seem like one project is a clear response to the other.
Oh, you're befuddled.
You're befuddled.
I asked Altman the same question I posed to Blania in our first conversations.
What does the world look like if World Coin fully succeeds and everything breaks right?
Let's say billions of users have onboarded the financial gains from AGI are fairly distributed to all.
What's that future like?
This is another way of asking, in a sense, what's the point of all of this?
I think we are just to be the best version of whatever we hope for.
It's magic.
See, the best version of whatever we hope for.
They sell you on a dream sequence.
Just like the line is selling you on equitable views and a super city integrated with VR and AR.
It's the best thing ever.
More individual autonomy and agency, more time, more resources to do things.
This is the same thing that was sold two generations ago to our grandparents that the new robots and homes were going to give everybody more time to learn to play the piano and more free time.
Instead, you had one person in the home, generally the male, in a five to seven person home who owned his home and in many cases had two vehicles.
One person worked 40 hours a week, was able to pay for all that health care, you name it.
To what actually began to happen in the 70s and 80s, where families got smaller, people started taking out debt, and not only did the man sometimes have to have a second job, but of course the woman started working too.
And now you're in a situation, you didn't get more free time.
That was Johnny nonsense, where both parents often work.
They relegate their children growing up to daycare and the school system, and they don't own really anything because they're constantly in debt and paying a car payment and a mortgage.
And they don't have more free time.
But now we're going to get that free time back if you bend the knee and open your eye to the Lochnar and have a digital wallet of slavery.
That's how we're going to do it.
We did it.
More autonomy and agency.
Come on, give me a break.
He speaks quickly and without hesitation.
These are ideas he's been mulling for years.
No, it's propaganda that's been put out for decades.
Like with any technological revolution, people figure out amazing new things to do for each other, but it's a very different and much more exciting world.
And the biggest risks and challenges to fulfill that vision, Altman thinks it's premature to talk about the big challenges, but acknowledges that OpenAI and WorldCine are a very long way from working and that we have a mountain of work in front of us.
Let's not talk about any of the negatives or challenges.
These are digital hucksters.
This is the Builder Bro.
This is a Bilderberg globalist agenda now coming into fruition, launching.
And that's why we watched that Bilderberg meeting.
Sam Altman has been anointed the field.
The goal of scanning 8 billion sets of eyeballs is almost hilariously ambitious.
For perspective, it would be a daunting logistical challenge to give everyone on the planet a free handful of candy, even without any biometric strings attached.
How do you reach remote areas?
How do you safely transport the precious orbs?
How do you explain this complicated relationship?
The looming powers of AGI and the need for UBI and the merits of cryptocurrency.
The pitch is essentially: hey, get some free crypto.
That's exactly the pitch.
Or be as excited as this guy that he's verified by the orb.
I am human!
The message has been refined and massaged and nuanced over time, but that's the basic hook.
You can sign up for some free crypto.
Free stuff.
Free stuff, no strings attached.
Free stuff.
And this orb is how we prove you haven't signed up anywhere else.
Consider Blania's very first field test, which sounds like something out of a Judd Appetow comedy.
At a park in Germany, Blania took the orb and looked for people to approach.
He spotted two young women.
Should he talk to them?
The World Coin team watched from a distance.
In the Berlin office on his phone, Blania finds a photo someone took of the scene and shows it to me.
It has the vibe of a guy at a bar nervous, mustering the courage to flirt.
I mean, the fact that they compare the experience to something that is really human, to something that I believe is going to eventually take your humanity away from you or attempt to, it turns my stomach a bit, not gonna lie.
My stomach's a little churning and a little turning, is all I'm saying.
That's all.
Back in the German park, they were still in the early Bitcoin project days.
So Blania approached one of the women.
He showed her the orb.
And he says that this can help give her free Bitcoin.
The only thing this device does, he told her, is make sure you only get it once, but you get Bitcoin.
And you should be excited about that.
The woman had a simple response: Are you crazy?
She opted not to get her iris scanned, but all was not lost as her friend volunteered.
Blania with a half smile, I think she just found me cute, actually.
He's a party boy.
He's 29.
He's good looking.
He hits the gym.
He wants to be a builder, bro.
Sam's a builder, bro.
Can I be a builder, bro?
Yo, bro.
Operators and Price Policy 00:14:30
That's not surprising.
Blania is a handsome guy.
He's also charming and intelligent and can speak clearly and convincingly about the benefits, nuance, and raison d'état of WorldCoin.
Who wouldn't be impressed?
But how do you scale Alex Blania?
Perhaps if Blania could be cloned, he could personally onboard all 8 billion people.
I humbly suggest cloning as another Sam Alton startup.
Yucca Yucca.
Yucca Yucca.
But in our non-cloning reality, in the beginning, Blania and a small team just lugged the orb around the streets of Berlin, showing to people and trying to explain it on the fly.
This was literally the early playbook Blania says people would approach us because it's the shiny chrome ball.
And people would be like, what the hell is that?
It's the Loch Narn.
These were the early orbs that spoke to the user in a strange robotic voice, instructing them to move closer or farther away, or maybe to the left.
Since then, the team has made a flurry of inventions to automate the process.
The robot voice baffled and amused onlookers, and sometimes they'd laugh and take orb selfies.
Gross.
Neo-colonialism issues.
Less amusing were the early attempts to recruit users in Nairobi, Sudan, and Indonesia.
In April of 2022, MIT Technology Report published a 7,000-word feature titled Deception, Exploited Workers, and Cash Handouts, How WorldCoin recruited its first half a million test users.
The writers argues that despite the project's lofty ambitions, so far all it's done is build a biometric database from the bodies of the poor.
Bing, bing, And they consider all of our asses poor.
They're talking about this as a vehicle for a universal basic income.
Hey, you are looked at like a sloven, less than human slave.
That's it.
The blistering report chronicles a shoddy operation rife with misinformation, data lapses, and malfunctioning orbs.
Our investigation revealed wide gaps between WorldCoin's public messaging, which focused on protecting privacy and what users experienced, writes Eileen Guau and Adi Rinaldi.
We found the company's representatives used deceptive marketing practices, collected more personal data than it acknowledged, and failed to obtain meaningful, informed consent.
I asked both Blania and Altman about the damning reports.
The first big thing is to understand is that the article came out before the company came out of a Series A, said Blania.
It's okay.
That's not an excuse, but he emphasized that the project was in its infancy and that since then, literally everything has changed.
It's all changed.
Don't worry.
It's all good.
Don't worry.
With tighter operations and protocols in place.
I cannot think of a single thing that was the same, he says.
The counter to this counter, of course, is that the very possibility of mistakes like this, however well-intended, the team, that make people queasy about sharing their biometric data, as they should be.
Blaney also bristles that the piece was framed as, in his words, a colonialist approach of trying to just sign up poor people all over the world.
He said this is misleading as over 50% of the signups at the time came from the wealthier spots like Norway and Finland and European countries.
Yeah, the lower or middle income people in those countries.
You think billionaires were lining up hand over fist for their free world coin?
Give me a break.
Their goal was to test signups in both developed and developing regions in hot and cold climates, city and rural, to better understand what works and what doesn't.
We just need to understand.
Altman sees the missteps as natural growing pains for any large-scale operation.
For any new system, you will face initial fraud, Altman says.
That's part of the reason.
That's not true, by the way.
For any new system, you will face some initial fraud.
They love to exonerate themselves.
There's always a little bit of fraud in the beginning.
Don't worry, there'll be no fraud in the middle in the end.
No, no, no fraud.
That's part of the reason we've been doing this for a long time now.
The slow beta period.
No, you are the beta project, right?
I'll say it again.
The war of terror, the Middle East, that's the alpha.
They began to beta test certain things, but now it's the beta test on the public.
To understand how the system can face abuse and how we're going to mitigate against it or against that, I don't know of any system at this scale and at this level of ambition that has no fraud issue at all.
We want to be thoughtful about that.
Oh, we want to be thoughtful.
One of these mitigating actions was to change the way the orb operators are compensated.
There are currently between 200 and 250 active orbs in the field and roughly two dozen orb operators who each hire their own sub teams of on-the-ground helpers in the beginning.
WorldCoin paid operators simply for raw number of sign-ups, which led to some sloppy and shoddy practices.
Give me that cheese.
Sign them up and give me that cheese.
Blania says that operators are now incentivized not just by the quantity, but also the quality of the signups.
Like how bigoted is that?
And how well users understand what is happening weeks after the orb scan?
The operators will be paid more if users are actually using the world app.
The main way to use the world app right now is claiming your one weekly world coin.
I spoke with two operators in Spain, Gonzalo Riseo and Juan Chacon, who largely corroborated that new protocol.
But whether the process is being tightly followed around the globe remains an open question.
How can people trust the WorldCoin has really addressed the problems?
Altman hears the questions and he knows he's unlikely to win over the skeptics.
He doubts he has any answers that will satisfy and he seems to be okay with that.
He believes the more persuasive answers will come not from him or Blania or the company, but from the early users of WorldCoin.
You can go try to answer a bunch of questions and do all these things, but that's not really how it works, says Altman.
What really works, he says, is the first million people from early adopters, the people leaning forward, convince the next 10 million.
And then that 10 million is closer to the normies.
And they convince the next 100 million.
And those are really the normies that convince the other few billion.
The normies.
In our very first conversation, Blania told me if World ID and the UBI of WorldCind is fully adopted at scale, this would probably be one of the most profound technological shifts that has ever happened.
If this is indeed the case, wouldn't that create a new complicated set of legal, policy, and even existential questions that governments need to reckon with now?
More government control, more government takeover, UBI for all.
Get rid of cash.
Get rid of privacy on the internet.
Get rid of VPNs.
All that stuff.
That's what addressing the situation would mean.
Submit to the Lochnar.
As I finish up my session in the Berlin office, one final question keeps gnawing at me.
It almost feels like the project is so ambitious, so wild, so transformative, at least in theory, that the powers that be haven't fully considered the consequences.
If humanity is compensated, not by the sweat of labor, but instead from AGI, wouldn't that represent a fundamental shift in the way the world is structured?
And wouldn't governments insist on regulating this?
Assuming the answer is yes, how is WorldCoin tackling that question?
Blania leans back in his chair, stretches out his long legs, and thinks for a moment.
This is obviously a major discussion point, he says.
I'll start with what's on the top of my mind right now.
And what is top of mind is actually way less sophisticated than all the things you just mentioned.
What they focused on, says Blamia, is simply the basic meat and potatoes of regulatory uncertainty in this U.S. WorldCoin is very likely to be the largest onboarding of crypto the world has ever seen, says Blania.
So if you don't like crypto, Altman pushes back on the idea policymakers are clueless or have their heads in the sand.
I went to like 22 countries and met with many world leaders and much more than I thought.
People get this and they are taking it super serial.
Super serial!
Super seriously, he says.
It's unclear if by this he's referring to any particular ambitions of WorldCoin or the broader challenges posed by AI.
I'm now spending an increasing amount of time, not on the technical stuff, he says, but on policy challenges.
I'll bet you are.
That's why he's a builder, bro.
They don't want it to be open.
They want it heavily regulated.
They want to say that this is for democracy while they rig elections.
They want to say it's for digital freedom while they track trace database everything you do digitally and now bring it on home to under the skin with the internet of bodies.
And they sell you on a technocracy.
Okay?
And it's really a technopoly.
And it's really the post-truth world on the way to not only a transhumanist future, but a post-human future if they have their way.
And we're going to show you some video clips right after that that break that down.
Okay?
So yeah.
It's unclear if by this he's referring to the particular ambitions of WorldCoin or the broader challenges posed by AI.
I'm now spending an increasing amount of time, not on technical stuff, but oh yeah, the policy.
Ultimately, Altman says that for the world to get to a good place through all of this, it has to be a two-part solution or tech and policy together.
And the policy part, in some sense, may turn out to be more difficult.
I just, I, ugh.
Ugh.
The story continues even further below.
There's more than that.
I was going to say, oh, to right here.
Long one, I know.
You know, I want to play this.
This is an old school article, or not article, clip of a gentleman pretty much exposing this technocratic system.
Again, they sell you on the idea.
You're going to work like four hours.
No problem.
Where would we get all of these people willing to work for nothing?
When you no longer have a price system, you no longer have banks, insurance companies, brokerage firms, tax collectors, or any of the trappings that go with money.
Technocracy proposed that people should work four hours a day, four days a week, on a staggered schedule with 78 days continuous vacation every year.
Technocracy also proposed that people should begin work at 25 and retire at 45.
A question once asked in a high school classroom during this lecture was: who would carry out the garbage?
Who would do the dirty jobs?
I was trying to formulate an answer in my mind when one of the other people in the classroom provided a better answer than I could have.
He said that if it's a job that has to be done, if everyone took a turn, no one could complain.
The answer is indicative, in fact, of the real solutions to real problems will provided by those implementing the new system, no matter what it is that we might say now.
The establishment of a non-price social system would immediately produce a far simpler society.
Financial institutions and manipulations consume large amounts of what is currently involved in social operations.
With all of that gone, far fewer people would be needed to operate the society.
Along with the collapse of the price system, would go the financial and political superstructure that sits on top of society in a price system.
On one side of the chart, we might have the industrial sequences such as steel, autos, or computers, and so forth.
On the other side, one might have the service sequences, such as education, health, and entertainment.
A person from each sequence would sit on the Continental Control Board.
The function of a Continental Control Board would be budgeting for each planning cycle how much energy would be required to operate and maintain the social system.
They would also have to decide how many new structures and new equipment would be needed.
Allowance would have to be made for new research and so forth.
Yeah, it's a total slave grid.
That's what this is.
I want to shift gears for a moment.
I want to play a clip from Premium.
And this clip here is with Terry Newsom describing what he thinks is, you know, possibly one of the people that was provocatoring the event.
Won't hear about this on the mainstream.
It's a subject that we continually have to talk about.
Something Clicked In My Head 00:05:18
And that guy was there stationary for a purpose.
And he also, if you notice, he was covered head to toe, right?
You see, he had his baseball hat down, so we couldn't really see his eyes.
You couldn't see his hair.
He had a scarf wrapped around.
I mean, that guy was not.
Who goes to an event like that just by yourself with a megaphone wrapped from head to toe and don't doesn't move from the spot the whole time?
Absolutely.
Well, you know, it felt fetty the entire time.
You know, even when I got, and I got there pretty early, I'd say I got at the ellipse around 7 a.m.
And there was just a multitude of people.
There were tens of thousands of people there before 8 a.m.
I would say hundreds of thousands of people, at least 100,000 people at the ellipse.
Some people have said up to a million.
But there was barely any security.
And this ain't my first rodeo in DC.
And, you know, one of the mantras, one of those Bernesian talking points that they used during the war of terror was: if you see something, say something.
If you see something, say something.
And one of the major things was if someone's discarded a backpack or a suitcase and it's left alone, boy, that could be a terrorist bomb or threat.
And then you get there.
And if you want to get into the area where the speakers and the president were, there was basically guardrails that looked like you were going into a concert.
You were not really searched other than the fact you could not take your backpack or even selfie devices with you.
So what did you have?
You had literally thousands of unattended bags.
If you see something, say something, up against telephone poles, up against that area.
Almost no security.
Okay.
Almost no security, barely any police.
Forget about the National Guard that was requested.
By the way, you go to New York City, you go to D.C. on the regular, you see National Guard around.
They're usually there.
They were nowhere to be found.
And it was one of the things that clicked in my head, like, this doesn't seem right.
Then you find out that the night before, somebody is planting pipe bombs throughout the most surveilled city in the world, and they don't catch that person.
Yeah.
They seem to get the result they want on January 6th.
So none of the bombs actually go off.
I really do believe in hindsight that that was their plan B, and their plan A worked just enough so that they could paint this as some kind of a violent insurrection when no government officials were harmed.
None were ever under threat.
Nobody produced a firearm other than the person that murdered Ashley Babbitt.
And yet we still have this quote-unquote great narrative that's about to indict a former president, Terry.
Yeah, yeah, it's absurd.
You know, so like when these punks from Antifa and the Southern Poverty Law Center, you know, wrote that story, that bogus story, I mean, in late November, and then they started tagging the FBI, saying that the writer for the SPLC said, when we asked Terry Newsom why he tried to overthrow the government, he had no answer.
Number one, the weasel never asked me anything, right?
Number two, I didn't try to overthrow.
I was back in my room before people went through that last barrier.
I didn't even know when we got back and we're watching Fox.
I'm like, holy cow, somebody got it.
They got into the Capitol.
So we had no intent on doing any of that stuff.
But all of a sudden, all these Antifa guys are trying to label me as a terrorist who tried to overthrow the government.
And then all of a sudden, a few weeks later, I'm on a domestic terrorist watch list.
I didn't do anything wrong.
My friend didn't do anything wrong.
We didn't even yell or scream at anyone.
Right.
And I was surprised.
And we still don't know to this day.
Is it because I'm a father who spoke out aggressively at school boards and calling them out?
Or two years later, because I happened to be down there, I didn't hurt anyone.
I didn't break anything.
I didn't, you know, I didn't go inside the Capitol.
And another point that is important to this, too, is that, you know, my buddy, and you might have seen some of the photos there, he's got his Cook County Sheriff's hat on, you know, the winter hat.
You know, it says Cook County Sheriffs.
The Antifa guys know that.
They put it all over Twitter.
They're trying to guess my buddy's name.
And who goes to an insurrection?
You wear your sheriff's hat.
I mean, he just retired.
And so what happened was the FBI went with our pictures back in January when this happened.
So when these Jamokes were tagging me, right, and saying I tried to overthrow the government, you know, you get worried because of General Flynn and all that crazy stuff that happened for people that didn't do anything, right?
But I know they looked into us back in January and they brought those pictures to my friend's supervisors.
And they said, hey, he goes, yeah, this is so-and-so.
Yeah, he just retired.
Great guy.
We love him.
He just retired.
As soon as the feds found out he was retired, they didn't look into him anymore.
So you know darn well back in January, in the month of when that stuff happened, if we really did anything wrong, Jason, we would have been arrested.
Get the whole story on Red Voice Media using the link below, completely uncensored and unfree.
Redvoicemedia.com slash uncensored.
Machine Intelligence Future 00:09:14
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Okay, I've got a clip here of Dennis Bushnell essentially laying out this system of track trace database, of reading all your emails, of doing all these things of the AI and the end of humanity in general.
It's a six-minute clip out of like a 45-minute conversation.
Okay.
And it's important because this new Lochnar Altman-free world coin is part of that system.
Okay.
The machines are capable of really good deep learning.
And that's what most of the current AI is based on.
The current AI is essentially soft computing.
It's neural nets, fuzzy logic, medical agro.
And by the way, this is like 2016.
Okay, so this is more than like seven years ago.
Want to point that out.
And the deep learning.
The machines coming up as we leave silicon and go to bio-optical quantum nano-molecular and atomic computing, there's another 10 to the 8th to 10 to the 12th to go.
We've come 10 to the 8th so far.
The machine intelligence, currently, there's the soft computing business, but no one really sees a way to get to humans via deep learning or soft computing.
They just don't bet yet.
There's no breakthrough in algorithms.
What we are doing, which will get to humans, people now think, and this is what's worrying people, is the biomimetics part.
This is where you nano section the neocortex, replicate it in silicon, and you don't have to understand how it works.
You just have to make it work this way as an artificial human brain surrogate.
An artificial human brain surrogate.
Biomimetics.
Get familiar.
They will all go to Google.
Oh, God.
Okay?
So this is now.
See, he's talking about the monopoly that Google has and how this is the global brain and how they're just openly going to spy on everything you do.
And that's the plan.
It's got a chief scientist at NASA.
He's very open about it.
The de facto global brain, which will only get better.
And we are busily with nanosensors and other sensors networking within 10 years some 3 trillion sensors.
So the global brain will be fed with all of this information, okay, and it will have all of the contents of all the libraries, and it will read all of everybody's emails and everything else.
And everything else.
And he smiles as he says it.
There is no, this guy's not concerned about privacy.
Whenever they talk about privacy, that's bullsnap.
And so you end up with a really big global brain.
That's different from intelligence.
Exactly.
But they're telling you that they're replicating intelligence or it's artificial intelligence and it knows better than you.
And when it tells you lies, it's not an inbuilt feature.
It's a hallucination and we're going to fix it.
These people that you speak of that are worried about this are worried about the fact that as we develop, which we can now, it looks like, via biomedics at least in the next 10, 20, 25 years, a human-level machine intelligence, there's the conventional rules of we're going to make it friendly to humans.
Well, not so much.
No, I don't know about that.
That's probably not reality.
Well, it turns out that people have now delved into that a bit and they're not so sure we can do that.
Oh, well, you know, and a really good brain, human-level and beyond machine intelligence, could easily produce untoward effects on humans.
It wouldn't have to be malicious.
It would just have to be unthinking and wipe us all up given our huge reliance upon electrons in everything we do.
And in fact, what we're developing this time is essentially a second intelligent species.
We are, with the biomimetics, where we're nanosectioning the neocortex and replicating it in silicon, people allege we're 10 to 15 to maybe 20 years max out from having a human-level machine intelligence.
The nano-robotics is giving all the dexterity, human dexterity, and so forth.
So when one looks in the totality of the human versus the robot, the robot knows more.
The robot has a much better safety record in aviation.
85% of the safety issues are human factors.
And you notice why they don't really care about the pilots.
Because they're getting rid of them.
I mean, that's the NextGen 2025 plan.
Anybody going to look at NextGen 2025?
Go check it out.
It's like something out of total recall, exactly what they want.
They're trying to work human beings out.
It's clear if you want a safer system, you have less humans.
A safer system, less humans.
And he means not on every level, believe it.
The machines so far are more knowledgeable.
The robot that we're using now to do cancer research and cancer treatments is much better than the human physicians.
The teachers are, in fact, more effective, the robot teachers, in educating children.
They're more creative.
The child has more control and so forth and so on.
The studies show that children learn four to five times faster than they do in the conventional schools.
I keep telling you, they want to work the teachers out as well.
And AI is coming.
And they're going to base it all on, you're going to volunteer because you're going to want the funding.
And then you're going to add here because you need the funding.
And then you're out.
And it's AI and robotics teaching your kids.
Will that be enough to homeschool?
Will it be illegal to homeschool by then?
And that's because conventional schools, they have a large amount of time keeping order.
The classmates are not always supportive for people who are brainy and intelligent, so forth and so on.
So the total education system for the robot teacher tends to be better.
There will be essentially no jobs the machines cannot do.
We currently have creative software that are doing ideation just as good or better than humans now.
The creative jobs will be the last ones to go, but I have not been able to discern any jobs the machines cannot do as machine intelligence and all the rest of the autonomous robotics develops.
So now we're to your question.
Okay, what do you do with these people?
There's essentially three options.
You've covered one, which is the guaranteed income.
Again, UBI, very much a part of the program.
The Lochnar is here for your UBI.
And the machines can produce the productivity, the wealth necessary to pay this.
It's just the machines do the work instead of the people.
Yes, you have to change the cultural milieu, but this is eventually doable.
This is only one approach.
The second approach is the fact that what's changed since you last looked at this is the whole technology level.
And we humans are now converting ourselves into sideworks.
We now have artificial retinas, artificial hearts.
We have brain chips.
DARPA's working on brain chips for super soldiers.
We can have a high-bandwidth comp port built in so we don't have to use the sensors and they have very limited bandwidth.
And eventually this all ends up with uploading into the machines.
And instead of us versus them, humans versus the machines, we become them.
Or they become us.
Or you end up with human-contaminated machines.
Human contaminated machines.
Will You Get Excited? 00:00:34
The Lochnar is here.
What will you do?
WorldCoin is here.
What will you do?
Will you stand up against it?
Or will you get really excited?
Like Mr. Hong Kong Johnny Nonsense over there.
I don't know.
Guys, thumbs it up, subscribe, share.
We're here Monday through Thursday, 9 to 11 a.m. Eastern.
Don't go anywhere.
You're actually going to get an extra hour of Burmese coming up.
If you're over at RVMRumble.com, the Red Voice Media stream goes through 8.30 p.m.
So don't miss any of it.
I love you.
I'll see you guys on the flip side tomorrow.
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