a continuation of our implant procedure video: • Getting an RFID Implant unedited footage ($5+ patrons): / 34066842 more modern rogue excerpts: • Modern Rogue Excerpts
@@Totally_A_Bot I felt fine enough to drive an hour home right then and there when I got mine. My hands still had visible little puncture marks for maybe a week or week and a half? Also during that period of time The chips are a little bit unstable as your hand has to heal around them and build up some collagen. So it's best to not poke at them or do things that might disturb them during that time frame. But I was able to take the bandages off in just a day or so.
@@DeviantOllam I'm planning on getting an I am ROBOT X2.1 implant, that uses both NFC and RFID in one capsule. I've got one question - which hand would you recommend putting it into? I'm right handed, so my initial feeling is that putting it in the left hand would be better. But, I'd rather ask you for your opinion first. Thanks!
no have gloves made with a programmer inside and have someone see their card behind you and then the person who sees the card sends the answer to a little machine that reprograms the chip and trhen he takes his glove off and waves it in front of someones phone and says is this your card
That was honestly the first thing I thought of when I saw the original video. Rickrolling has been around for over a decade; it's about time for it to ascend into the realm of the flesh.
yes kinda sad they didnt just timestamp to skip the intro ! link share has this option, or you can manually add right after the url " ?t=XX " where XX is seconds
Everyone uses these less capable, more expensive, pieces of trash phones that have less life-span. I just don't get it. Too many of my friends use iPhones. Utterly disgusting.
Gus Johnnson Just something to note, iPhones typically have longer support than the majority of android phones. Typically 5+ years compared to Samsung’s 2 years for most models.
@@bertsteinich My samsung a5 was 100$ new and performs near exactly what an iphone 8 did at the time for 1/5fth the price and my phone is still supported.
@@gusjohnnson9641 iPhones really aren't as bad as most people make them out. I personally hate the UI and some of the stupid artificial limitations, but their products usually are sturdily built (even if stupidly hard to repair) and work fine.
So happy to see you guys are enjoying our implants. You can also use it as a trigger for HomeKit automatizations. The best way to read with an iPhone is to place the very top of the iPhone perpendicular to the chip’s antena.
This is very cool, but some days I miss them making half baked weapons with duct tape and zip ties and watching Brian be shocked it worked. Though he seems shocked anything they do work, which is half the fun.
I literally can't get through a week without a new episode from you guys... my vision blurs, I sweat, I get shooting pains in my chest and arm, and I start mumbling in Latin... Looks like im good for another week, phew
“It also forced all people, great and small, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hands or on their foreheads, so that they could not buy or sell unless they had the mark, which is the name of the beast or the number of it’s name.” Revelation 13:16-17 Be aware people, note the “so they could not buy or sell unless they had the mark” and the advances on the online banking we have today.
Can this be programmed with a credit account so his hand is like tap to pay? If there are tons of things you can do with this, they should make a video of Jason using his chip in all sorts of different scenarios.
No, the tap-to-pay cards have a lot of security on them and actually run computation on the chip to create a one-time-use token each time it's scanned. The implant creators are trying to work with credit card companies to get an implant that will do that, but those companies are hesitant to play along.
@@mrWade101 Sort of - the antenna inside a full-size credit card is too big. In Europe they make tap-to-pay cards about the size of a phone SIM card called micro bank cards, meant to be used in keyfobs or wristbands. Those can be de-encapsulated and implated in a flat semi-flexible implant.
I wish i could see you guys down here in texarkana texas it would be amazing I have been following brian since scam school i use to love watching all the bar tricks and hacks with my dad lol
I don't know...I know its dumb and superstitious but these implants creep me out. Mark of the beast and all that. I was raise in the Christian church and its a fairly common belief among some of them that these will one day be used to allow devil worshipers to identify one another. I don't believe that but it still creeps me out on the same level as, like seeing a demon in a movie or something. You know its not real but it still freaks you out.
imagine having your buisness card in your hand... just fucking imagine how confused people would be when you just give them your hand and say like "heres my card" lol
Can we get an update from Brian on this? After a ~month of having it, what are his thoughts? Still cool? Any regrets? Any pain? What does he have on it currently? etc
I would love to have one of those, but the idea of having a piece of something hard between my mushy flesh... and moving it around and feeling it... and having to inject it... it gives me the heebie jeebies.
I think I would want it in my palm rather than the back of my hand, thinking of the RFID readers I encounter in my life, it would be difficult or really awkward/obvious to have to apply the back of my hand.
I remember back in Pewdiepie vs T-Series, someone made a QR code or something that would automatically subscribe someone to Pewdiepie. They should do that, to Jason's chip to subscribe to themselves
Someone could easily use that tool they used to program him to overwrite whatever he had in him already, they could straight up walk up, subtly put a malware site on his thing, and then the next time he goes to show it off, he gives em malware
I don't know if anyone has suggested this, but you do know that you can programme Jason's chip with a playing card suit and number and use that as a reveal in a mind reading or card prediction routine right?
problem with this is most phones come with RFID off by default from the factory, so to pull a trick on someone you would first have to have access to their phone to enable it, and pray it doesn't ask you for the phone's passcode to change the settings.