An outspoken 5G critic has said nobody knows who invented the technology and believes local authorities installing it don't know its true power.
Mark Steele, who claims to have worked on military projects which he cannot disclose under the Official Secrets Act, claimed 5G was originally developed for warfare and can be abused to spy on people inside their homes.
He exclusively told Daily Star Online that he thinks authorities are clueless about what 5G street lights being installed up and down the country actually do – with their true purpose “a little more nefarious”.
“I do not believe that people who are installing or the local authorities have any real idea about what the capabilities of this equipment is,” he said.
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“This equipment as actually designed for urban environments and battlefields technology.
“So let’s say if you were an enemy combatant and you have your Kalashnikov rifle, I can actually scan that environment and identify the weapon pretty easily right because I’ve already got a 3D map of that weapon in the computer.”
Mark said that the fact the lights detect when someone is in close proximity – as an energy-saving move – proves they are a scanner.
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“The public just do not know that they are being scanned and monitored with this equipment, you know the technicalities of it, this is supposedly so that they can reduce the light pollution so the lights only come on when someone is in the street,” he said.
“I mean, this is an admission, the companies have admitted that these are scanners.”
Although many technology companies own patents to 5G, it appears as if its development was in the works more than a decade ago.
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In a 2008 press release from NASA, it says that the space agency and a machine intelligence company called m2mi “will cooperate to develop a fifth-generation telecommunications and networking system for Internet protocol-based and related services”.
“Fifth Generation, or 5G, incorporates Voice Over Internet Protocol, video, data, wireless, and an integrated machine-to-machine intelligence layer, or m2mi, for seamless information exchange and use,” it continued.
It is not clear if NASA and m2mi discovered 5G or if they were just part of the mad rush to develop the technology when its superior networking abilities became apparent.
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