Published on Dec 23, 2013
"The government interceded, stole
the technology and attempted to use this in classified programs," says
Jim O'Keefe, the president of the small New Jersey technology company
Demodulation. He has filed a $50 million lawsuit against the U.S.
government, accusing it of taking his firm's research."
The Jim O'Keefe aforementioned is my father. Many of you know he is an engineer. His company, "Demodulation," created an innovative technology; a fiber smaller than the diameter of a human hair that can be easily hidden in a variety of products. When this fiber is stimulated remotely by a low energy source it creates an electronic signature that can be identified.
But then the government stepped in.
The federal government pirated my father's patents, hid behind the veil of national security, and used taxpayer money to steal his trade secrets and then compete with the private sector.
The Jim O'Keefe aforementioned is my father. Many of you know he is an engineer. His company, "Demodulation," created an innovative technology; a fiber smaller than the diameter of a human hair that can be easily hidden in a variety of products. When this fiber is stimulated remotely by a low energy source it creates an electronic signature that can be identified.
But then the government stepped in.
The federal government pirated my father's patents, hid behind the veil of national security, and used taxpayer money to steal his trade secrets and then compete with the private sector.
NJO: Title, video and blurb from James O'Keefe's YouTube channel VeritasVisuals.
What an iteresting concept of generating electronic signatures! Where can I find scientific publications about a mechanism that creates them?
ReplyDeleteI have no idea. Sorry.
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