Sunday Mar 02, 2025

Certificate of Vaccination ID AI

Certificate of Vaccination ID AI

 

Watch this on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v6q19ki-certificate-of-vaccination-id-ai.html

 

Or COVID 19. There was a summit meeting held on May 20, 2016 at the United Nations Headquarters in New York called ID2020. The summit was the first gathering of the ID2020 Alliance, which aims to create a digital identity for everyone by 2030.

 

Goals

 

To identify how technology and private sector expertise could provide digital identity to everyone 

 

To develop technical roadmaps for how to design, develop, and deploy digital identities 

 

To build a robust evidence base to inform advocacy and policy 

 

Attendees and participants

 

Over 400 people attended the summit, including experts in blockchain and other cryptographic technology 

 

The summit was supported by PwC, Microsoft, the International Telecommunications Union, and the UN Office of Partnerships 

 

Other participating organizations included Intel, IBM, Thomson Reuters, SAP, NEC Corporation, Verizon, and Samsung 

 

Outcomes

 

The summit helped accelerate progress towards the goal of a digital identity for everyone by 2030. Widespread consensus among ID2020 attendees that identity is both a fundamental human right and a necessary prerequisite for the success of the Sustainable 

 

The summit led to the creation of technical white papers and proposals 

 

The summit helped define functional requirements and technical interoperability standards 

 

The inaugural ID2020 Summit brought together over 400 people to discuss how to provide a unique digital identity to everyone on the planet, including the 1.5 billion people living without any form of recognized identification.

 

Participants included over 150 private sector companies, 11 UN agencies, diverse non-profits, governments, and representatives from academia. This collaborative, multi-sectoral forum explored both the human challenges of life without identity, explored relevant technological innovations, and highlighted opportunities and constraints for scaling up.

 

Development Goals.

 

Recognition that the private sector has significant expertise and technology that could be transformative in accelerating access to digital identity.

 

Broad understanding that no single organization or government can “own” identity, but instead, that a public-private partnership is needed to bring together the broad group of stakeholders, provide coordination, and ensure that the best technological innovations are implemented in ways that are appropriate, secure and sustainable.

 

Sweeping commitments from conference attendees to contribute towards the shared goal of universal digital identity. These commitments ranged from individuals pledging their time to corporations offering ongoing financial support.

 

According to the world economic forum, “In a digital world, there's no excuse for more than a billion people to lack an official identity” Then they use gender as their cover, “A one-woman public-private partnership is trying to provide digital ID to more than a billion people worldwide.”

 

They go on to say, “ID2020 has enlisted the UN, some of the world’s most powerful tech companies and dozens of start-ups to see whether a new technology, perhaps blockchain, could solve this problem.”

 

Well, there isn’t a problem. COVID 19 was planned, scheduled and released upon the public to put a digital ID chip into everyone. And 75% of the population now has it without their knowledge.

 

“At a summit ID2020 organised at the UN headquarters in New York earlier this year, Marley Gray, who runs Microsoft’s work on blockchain, said, ‘We have a sort of technological perfect storm. First is the cloud, then very inexpensive mobile devices, and then this notion of establishing secure identity not just for individuals, but for everything, to be able to track and transact securely. The challenge is not necessarily the technology or the organisation, it’s bringing it all together.’

 

“ID2020 is not trying to put forward one particular solution. Rather, it has convened a group including development agencies, think tanks and companies such Microsoft, PWC, Cisco, Accenture and Deloitte to spend the years to 2020 figuring out what a solution might look like.”

 

“Nevertheless, Niall McCann of the UN Development Program, which does not yet have any formal relationship with ID2020 but has been involved in discussions on the project, told Apolitical, ‘Look, this is the future. There is just no question that this is the future, digitising paper identity documents and making them into applications on a smart device.’

 

“At the moment, UNICEF makes great efforts to register children at birth, and the UN’s sustainable development goal on identity cites birth registration as the benchmark for securing legal identity, but, says McCann, ‘What do you do for people whose birth was never recorded or what about countries where management of civil registration is so poor that records have been lost or destroyed or they’re simply not able to go back and find a copy for people who’ve lost one?”

 

‘I’ve got my birth certificate but it’s a very very old piece of paper at this point. It’s a piece of paper with no photograph and, even if it did have a photograph, it would be a photograph just of a baby. I hope Ireland has an electronic database to back that up, but what about countries that don’t, where people have lost theirs or are carrying around a shabby handwritten bit of paper?’

 

“Moreover, a lot of work on registration is being done at cross-purposes. UNICEF stops tracking people when they become adults, while UNDP engages in huge voter-registration drives, but then often leaves when the elections are over.”

 

“In fact, UNDP has used biometric tech to help create voter registers – preventing people voting more than once – in more than a dozen countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, Zambia, Bangladesh and Nepal. But when it comes to registration, many prospective voters don’t have any ID documents to sign up with in the first place. Says McCann, ‘So several countries have said, can you now help us do a national identity card or register using this same biometric equipment?’”

 

“Attempts to free identity from pieces of paper and bring it into the digital age are proliferating around the world. India’s Aadhaar program has scanned the irises and taken the fingerprints of 1.07billion people, and issued them with an ID number. New South Wales in Australia is switching its driving licences onto smartphone apps and, while the state works up to fully digital driving licences, due 2018, has just begun trialling the technology with things like fishing licences.”

 

The World Economic Forum goes on to say on their website:

 

“But national identity registers come with considerable risks of their own. As John Edge puts it, ‘Aadhaar scares the daylights out of me. You wouldn’t have wanted to deploy Aadhaar in Rwanda a few years ago. It would be a very efficient way of killing people. A centralised biometric identity system, if it falls into the wrong hands, is a weapon.’”

 

“Some countries, like the UK, have rejected proposals for what is essentially a unified digital list of everyone who lives in the country. There are several nightmare scenarios: the people in, say, the driver licensing agency get to look at your tax records; a racist government cross-references data on ethnicity and crime and abuses the results; the database breaks and people’s identities are digitally extinguished.”

 

“That is why the people behind ID2020 are especially interested in a decentralised system, i.e. something involving blockchain. The technology, which underlies bitcoin, holds tamper-proof records across a network of computers. Although it seems unlikely that there will ever be a global ID system independent of governments, it is conceivable that the poorest and most vulnerable people would be able to log into a system and prove who they are to social services, banks or foreign governments.”

 

“Dakota Gruener has also conceived a means by which to get many of those people registered in the first place. She came to ID2020 from GAVI, a public-private partnership that vaccinates children in poor countries. It has a huge distribution network which an ID scheme could piggyback onto. As Edge puts it, ‘You’ve got the kid’s arm in your hand, you’re injecting them, and you don’t capture their identity or medical records.’”

 

“The potential is enormous. In Malawi, for example, some 90% of children are vaccinated, but fewer than 5% have a birth certificate. Worldwide, around 86% of children get three doses of the diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine, generally considered the gold standard, but an estimated 98% get vaccinated with at least something.”

 

“Ruchira Gupta, a campaigner against sex trafficking who also participated in the ID2020 summit, said, ‘I think this is going to be system-changing, because it can protect the last girl, who is stuck in a mud hut in a village and has no electricity, no water, no education, not even a road to walk to school, no second set of clothes, perhaps no food, and what that ID can do for her is link her to government services.’”

 

“But for all the exciting developments, the question of precisely how this nut can be cracked is complex in the extreme. The World Bank also has a program, ID4D, which is examining some of the policy dimensions. The people involved with ID2020 believe that the answer will come from bringing governments and international organisations together with tech companies and start-ups, partly because private enterprise is pouring money into developing these kinds of technologies, and partly because it would be practically impossible for non-specialists in, say, UNDP or the World Bank, to stay at the forefront of everything that’s being invented.”

 

“Edge himself is profoundly committed to the project. PTB ventures, a company he cofounded with David Fields, has invested in GovCoin, a blockchain app that the UK government is trialling for welfare claimants. And he says he became interested in socially beneficial business because of a girl he met in a bar, and went on to marry. ‘The girl I met works in early childhood development. She asked me on our first date what I was doing to make a difference. And the answer was: not very much.’”

 

“The ensuing conversation led him to see Meena, a Lucy Liu film about a girl trafficked into prostitution, then to discovering that 230million children have no form of ID, and eventually to ID2020. ‘If I want to write a white paper, there’s a hundred places,’ he said. ‘If you want to start getting the private sector to work with the UN, there was nothing. And who currently has a plan to get some form of identity for the 60million plus stateless people? The answer to my mind is, aside from ID2020, no one.’”

 

According to Snopes, “Does COVID Stand for 'Certificate of Vaccination ID'? Every so often, a new theory pops up on social media about the meaning of "COVID-19," the name given to the disease caused by the coronavirus strain that began spreading in late 2019 and continued into 2021. Invariably, those theories are pretty outlandish. The latest one emerged in a series of tweets that claimed that “COVID” stands for “Certificate of Vaccination ID,” and that “19” corresponds to the letters “AI,” which stands for “Artificial Intelligence.” Could they be paid off?

 

Regardless of the origins or actual severity of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus pandemic has been leveraged to advance broader agendas that were meticulously planned long before the outbreak. One of the key motivations behind declaring a global pandemic was to facilitate the widespread adoption of emerging technologies, including facial recognition, digital IDs, payment systems, mRNA vaccines, and vaccine certificates. These intentions are openly discussed in publications such as COVID-19: The Great Reset and The Fourth Industrial Revolution.

 

The architects of this so-called "plandemic" understood that new technologies often face public resistance but could be rapidly embraced during a public health crisis. What better way to compel people to adopt technologies designed to control humanity than by instilling fear of a "deadly" virus? From the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis, the public was told that a return to normalcy depended on global vaccination efforts. Some even claimed that certain aspects of pre-pandemic life would never return. Behind the scenes, the individuals and organizations involved in initiatives like Crimson Contagion and Event 201 secretly aimed to reshape the world in a technocratic image, using the pandemic as a cover to implement their plans.

 

For decades, Hollywood has played a significant role in advancing globalist agendas, conditioning the public to accept pervasive surveillance through films like Enemy of the State, Eagle Eye, and Minority Report. The dystopian societies depicted in these movies have now become a reality.

 

On January 14, the Vaccination Credential Initiative (VCI) was announced, uniting a coalition of health and technology corporations, including Microsoft, Oracle, and the Mayo Clinic, to standardize digital access to vaccination records. The VCI is supported by the World Economic Forum (led by Klaus Schwab and his Great Reset agenda) through The Commons Project Foundation and its Common Pass initiative.

 

Common Pass is described as a "globally-interoperable platform" for individuals to document their COVID-19 status, including health declarations, PCR test results, and vaccination records, to meet international travel requirements while supposedly protecting health data privacy. In essence, it is a digital tracking system designed to restrict travel for those who are not up-to-date with vaccines or other health mandates. The platform requires a smartphone and integrates with Apple Health and Android’s CommonHealth apps. Authorities can scan a QR code within the app to verify an individual’s travel eligibility. The system is expected to launch in the first half of 2022.

 

In this emerging new world, the so-called Global Syndicate aims to restrict the average citizen’s freedom to travel without constant monitoring and compliance with new societal rules. While they claim that reducing travel will benefit the environment and combat climate change, this is merely a pretext to erode individual freedoms. In reality, they seek to lock humanity into a surveillance grid capable of tracking every movement—and eventually, every thought.

 

As I warned in part four of the Beware the Vaccine series, employers may soon make it difficult to work without proof of vaccination. Similarly, stores, entertainment venues, restaurants, museums, and parks could require tools like Common Pass for access to essential goods and leisure activities. But the agenda doesn’t stop there.

 

Governments worldwide have increasingly used surveillance technologies, including facial recognition, under the guise of combating COVID-19. As early as April 2020, Amazon began using thermal cameras to screen workers for fever and other symptoms. Companies like Thermal Guardian and Flir have supplied thermal cameras to airports, healthcare facilities, businesses, casinos, and even grocery stores throughout the pandemic.

 

Contact tracing efforts largely failed due to public resistance and underdeveloped technology. However, companies like TraceSafe and Estimote have introduced the next wave of contact tracing tools in the form of biometric wearable devices. Wearables from Flywallet and Digital DNA can store vaccine certificates. While these devices are currently worn externally, the ultimate goal is widespread adoption of bodily implants, as detailed in my Internet of Bodies article.

 

Despite concerns about privacy violations, the development and implementation of these technologies by governments and corporations continue unabated. This rapid digital transformation of society raises serious concerns for the future.

 

Globalists often present themselves as saviors while secretly planning humanity’s subjugation. A global technocracy cannot be established without robust surveillance systems, widespread artificial intelligence, and the digitization of all aspects of life.

 

The push for digital identification is advancing at an unprecedented pace. As I wrote in part five of the Beware the Vaccine series:

 

…the plan is to roll out a comprehensive digital ID (ID2020) that would include driver’s licenses, passports, work badges, building access cards, debit and credit cards, transit passes, and more.

 

Under the guise of aiding marginalized populations and protecting civil liberties, technocrats will use digital IDs to control access to government services, finance, healthcare, travel, and any other area requiring identification. The ID2020 initiative is backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation, both of which co-sponsored Event 201, the pandemic simulation that foreshadowed the COVID-19 crisis. Is it a coincidence that these foundations are also driving global vaccination efforts and the enforcement of digital IDs?

 

The next step in this agenda, aligned with a planned global economic reset, will be the universal adoption of digital payments and the elimination of cash.

 

The pandemic has accelerated the shift away from cash. In March 2020, the World Health Organization labeled cash as a potential vector for coronavirus transmission, leading to restrictions on its use worldwide. Coin shortages further pushed the transition to digital payments. Efforts to implement digital currencies have intensified, following a pre-planned schedule.

 

Before the pandemic, cash was still widely used in the U.S., though its use was declining in China and other Asian countries. The COVID-19 crisis provided the perfect opportunity to accelerate the adoption of digital payments in Western nations.

 

Many view digital currencies and blockchain technology as tools for decentralization and reduced oversight by central banks. However, history shows that elites tend to consolidate control as societies move away from physical currency.

 

This push for digitalization places the world at a crossroads. I believe the transition to a global digital economy will mirror the rise of Napster in the late 1990s, which revolutionized digital file sharing. While consumers initially enjoyed free access to music, the music industry eventually regained control through platforms like iTunes and Spotify. Similarly, blockchain and cryptocurrency may offer temporary financial freedom, but banking elites and technocrats will likely find ways to reassert control. The Federal Reserve has already proposed FedCoin, a centralized digital currency that could track and restrict transactions. Governments and corporations are increasingly cracking down on cryptocurrencies, with Facebook and Google banning crypto ads. Meanwhile, Facebook plans to launch its own cryptocurrency, Diem.

 

Several countries and banks have introduced Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), threatening the independence and anonymity of blockchain-based financial systems. Once these efforts gain momentum, cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin may face extinction, with holders potentially criminalized or excluded from financial systems.

 

The war on terror laid the groundwork for the modern surveillance state. Initially justified as a means to track terrorists, surveillance tactics were soon turned on citizens, as revealed by whistleblowers like Edward Snowden and Julian Assange. Legislation such as the Patriot Act and the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) expanded government surveillance capabilities, leading to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Over time, this surveillance infrastructure has grown into a pervasive biosecurity police state.

 

Military-grade surveillance tools originally designed to track terrorists have been adapted for consumer use in devices like nanny cams, smartphones, smartwatches, and vehicles. The proliferation of surveillance cameras has reached staggering levels, with the U.S. and China alone deploying one camera for every four people. By 2021, over one billion cameras are expected to be in use globally.

 

DHS aims to collect biometric data, including DNA, facial recognition, fingerprints, and iris scans, from at least 259 million people by 2022. Using Amazon Web Services’ Homeland Advanced Recognition Technology (HART), DHS plans to confirm the identities of travelers at any point in their journey. This system poses significant risks to individual rights and freedoms, as it could be used to monitor political protests, religious activities, and personal relationships.

 

Northrop Grumman, a major U.S. defense contractor, has been awarded a $95 million contract to develop the HART system. This is just one of many government surveillance projects aimed at incorporating humanity into biometric databases.

 

To be clear, I am not opposed to technology itself. Technology is a tool, and its impact depends on how it is used and by whom. However, digital systems are vulnerable to hacking and misuse, and trusting those who develop and deploy these technologies is unwise. Many of these innovations are tied to governments, global entities, and tech giants with questionable motives.

 

These advancements are being used to create a global panopticon, enabling technocrats to control humanity through technological innovation. While some may celebrate the rise of artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and body implants, I remain skeptical. In these unprecedented times, I find myself longing for simpler technologies like corded telephones and fax machines.

 

I believe the vaccines are laced with self assembling nanotech that creates a computer and an antenna to report a digital ID to the government without our consent. And it reports our medical condition as well. This is not to be told to the public while they work on an ID system outside of their secretive surveillance.

 

The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred the development of digital health tools, including vaccine certificates, to facilitate safe travel and economic recovery. However, the creation of a globally recognized digital vaccine certification system is a complex challenge. Drawing lessons from existing digital identification (ID) systems and initiatives like the Digital Yellow Card, policymakers can better navigate the technical, legal, and ethical hurdles involved in implementing such a system.

 

Digital IDs, which provide a secure and verifiable way to authenticate individuals, have been successfully deployed in various countries. These systems offer valuable insights into the design and implementation of digital vaccine certificates. For instance, digital IDs emphasize interoperability, data privacy, and user accessibility—key principles that must also guide the development of vaccine certification platforms. Additionally, the Digital Yellow Card, an electronic version of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) vaccination record, demonstrates the importance of aligning with international standards to ensure global acceptance.

 

One of the primary challenges in creating a digital vaccine certificate system is ensuring interoperability across borders. Different countries and organizations may use varying technologies and standards, making it difficult to establish a universally recognized system. To address this, stakeholders must collaborate to develop common frameworks and protocols, much like the efforts seen in digital ID initiatives. For example, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) has established guidelines for digital travel credentials, which could serve as a model for vaccine certificates.

 

Data privacy and security are also critical concerns. Digital vaccine certificates will contain sensitive health information, making it essential to implement robust safeguards to protect user data. Lessons from digital ID systems, which often incorporate encryption and decentralized storage, can help mitigate risks. Moreover, transparency in how data is collected, stored, and used is vital to building public trust.

 

Equity and accessibility must also be prioritized. Not everyone has access to smartphones or reliable internet, particularly in low-income countries. Digital ID programs have addressed similar challenges by offering offline alternatives and ensuring inclusivity in design. Similarly, digital vaccine certificates should provide non-digital options to avoid excluding vulnerable populations.

 

Finally, the success of a digital vaccine certificate system depends on international cooperation and alignment with global health guidelines. The WHO and other international bodies play a crucial role in setting standards and fostering collaboration among nations. By learning from the experiences of digital ID systems and initiatives like the Digital Yellow Card, policymakers can create a vaccine certification framework that is secure, interoperable, and equitable.

 

The development of digital vaccine certificates presents an opportunity to leverage lessons from digital ID systems and existing health records. By focusing on interoperability, data privacy, accessibility, and international collaboration, stakeholders can build a system that supports global health and economic recovery while safeguarding individual rights.

 

Consent for the second surveillance system is a must. They will not stop until everyone consents. But in case they don’t, check out US Patent 1110758 Methods and systems of prioritizing treatments, vaccination, testing and/or activities while protecting the privacy of individuals

 

This application claims the benefit of priority of Israel Patent Application No. 277083 filed on Sep. 1, 2020, Israel Patent Application No. 276665 filed on Aug. 11, 2020, and Israel Patent Application No. 276648 filed on Aug. 11, 2020. The contents of the above applications are all incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein in their entirety. This application is also related to United Arab Emirates Patent Application No. P6001304/2020 filed on Sep. 17, 2020, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

 

The system requires a smart phone app transmitting data to a back-end server. The server stores data in a database, then looks over a graph of which people got close to people known to be infected with COVID-19, and prioritizes those people for vaccination.

 

In other words, this could slow down the spread of COVID-19. It does talk about generating ID numbers for people, anonymously tracking data about them, and transmitting that data to a server. Yes, the patent does describe a system for tracking people

 

In the summary of the invention, patent 1110758 describes this:

 

  • An electronic device associated with each person
  • The device has "proximity tracking circuitry", and when the device detects another nearby device information is exchanged between the devices
  • This is called a "proximity event", in which both devices compute a proximity score, meaning how close did the two devices get to one another
  • The proximity event will also gather data from multiple nearby devices, computing proximity scores between all devices
  • Detection of whether the proximity event occurred outdoors, or other well ventilated location, or whether it happened in a non-ventilated indoor space
  • It might require a GPS receiver
  • When the devices are able to, they connect over the Internet to a server to upload any collected data

 

The rest of the patent describes back-end software, databases, and algorithms to crunch through the data. The goal of the entire system is responding to a pandemic (like COVID-19) by tracking contacts between people. Those who were in close proximity to someone who was later determined to be infected with COVID-19 would then be contacted so they too could be tested and treated.

 

This shows the contacts between different people which might be detected by this software. The lines between each person in this diagram represent the proximity events. From this, the software running on the server generates recommendations of which people to vaccinate first based on their contacts with others.

 

Next we have US Patent 20140197405A1 which is Rfid tags based on self-assembly nanoparticles. A semiconductor device comprising a gate electrode; an insulating layer in electrical connection with the gate electrode; a source electrode and a drain electrode; and a semiconducting channel layer configured to selectively allow electrically connection between the source electrode and the drain electrode based on the voltage on the gate electrode; wherein the semiconducting channel layer comprises metal nanoparticles; and the semiconducting channel layer is in contact with the source electrode, the drain electrode and the insulating layer. A method of manufacturing the semiconductor device of the present invention is also disclosed. The nanoparticle solution is put in a container and the nanoparticles 32 in the nanoparticle solution are allowed to undergo self-assembly to form a 2D self-assembled nanoparticles monolayer on the surface of the nanoparticle solution. 

 

And you can’t transmit without a computer or semiconductor right? Meet US Patent 11227793B2 which is a Self-aligned pattern formation for a semiconductor device. A method of forming a self-aligned pattern of vias in a semiconductor device comprises forming a first layer of mandrels, then forming a second layer of mandrels orthogonal to the first layer of mandrels. The layout of the first and second layers of mandrels defines a pattern that can be used to create vias in a semiconductor material. Other embodiments are also described. And none of this could be possible without US Patent 7393699B2, which makes self assemble NANO-electronics possible.

 

There is also a a patent on self assembling LED lights inside the human body. This allows a person to test if you are actually carrying one. This information is all publicly available. You just have to connect the dots. Like finding the patent on a self-supporting flexible carbon nanotube paper composite electrode material for lithium ion batteries. Yes, it’s real. They have the ability to produce an entire computer system with rfid tracking and monitoring. Yes, even bluetooth. 

 

If you think that the powers that be, who have been caught over and over experimenting on the people, would not drool over a self assembling computer with bluetooth inside a human where they can track, monitor and check out your vital signs, you are a new kind of brainwashed fool. This is the most practical next step for the ruling elite. And the name COVID 19 wasn’t a good enough cover for their plans. Anons figured it out long ago that 75% of all people on earth are being tracked, monitored and sending their vitals to an AI system. Certificate of Vaccination ID AI.

 

Source

 

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1BkHua45TP/?mibextid=wwXIfr

https://medium.com/id2020/id2020-holds-inaugural-summit-at-the-united-nations-7112014add5e

https://www.weforum.org/stories/2016/12/in-a-digital-world-theres-no-excuse-for-more-than-a-billion-people-to-lack-an-official-identity/

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/covid-certificate-vaccination-id/

https://truthunmuted.org/vaccine-certificates-digital-ids-and-biometrics/

https://www.cgdev.org/publication/covid-vaccine-certificate-building-lessons-digital-id-digital-yellow-card

https://patents.google.com/patent/US11107588B2/en

https://patents.google.com/patent/US20140197405A1/en

https://patents.google.com/patent/US7393699B2/en?q=(self+assembly+nano+semiconductor)&oq=self+assembly+nano+semiconductor

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