Digital Control: Amazon Releases “Palm Payment” System

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by Mac Slavo, SHTF Plan:

The Amazon empire is trying to do away with cash and usher in a totalitarian control system that can be the digital prison for all humans. By launching Amazon One, the new “identity service” that allows Amazon customers to pay for overpriced, cheap-quality Amazon products using just the palm of the hand, the corporation is helping roll out the social credit system.

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Much like cell phones try to get humans to use fingerprints or retina scans to access the information stored, now Amazon has its version. The company is encouraging its customers to “link” their palms to their Amazon accounts right away so they can walk out of a Whole Foods Market or Amazon Fresh grocery store by swiping their hands rather than their chipped credit or debit cards, according to a report by Natural News. 

“Ditch your wallet and breeze through checkouts and entry gates with ease,” the company says in marketing materials for Amazon One, called “Your palm, your choice.”

“Just hover your palm over an Amazon One device and get going.”

This full slave planet is about to get even worse, and it continues to roll out in pieces everywhere. Humanity is going to have some tough choices to make in the upcoming months.

The World of Social Credit Just Got Much Closer

Giving access to your important information, such as unique palm markings is not going to end well. The ruling class and corporations always make it seem like these things are being done to make our lives easier, and yet once they have your identifications, they can decide when and what you can use it for. It’s always about control. When Amazon One was first introduced, tech writer James Vincent warned that it “isn’t a payment technology [but] an identity technology, and one that could give Amazon more reach into your life than ever before.”

Vincent added that palm scanning for shopping is “overkill,” and likely for the purpose of later expansion into other areas of commerce and life such as concert and theater venues, airports, office buildings, and even cross-border movement around the world.

Privacy rights in general, warns tech policy analyst Frederike Kaltheuner, are becoming “harder to establish and preserve” in the digital era because “your physical self is literally becoming a transactional tool.”

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