…And Jim Marrs, this week’s Dreamland host and author of "The Trillion Dollar Conspiracy," ought to know! Banks aren’t just giving you credit scores, they are issuing their customers "bank-depositor behavior score," based on your bank balances, deposit records and withdrawal activity. Banks are nervous about making loans, so they are checking out applicants carefully first by looking at your buying habits and your records of rent, utility and credit card payments. And if you pay your rent in cash, you may look like a deadbeat to your bank.read more

Who would have thought that space science has the kind of secrets worth spying for? Stewart David Nozette, one of the NASA scientists who discovered that there is water on the moon, has been arrested as a spy for Israel, after being caught on videotape in an FBI “sting” operation. What kinds of secrets was he revealing?

Art credit: Dreamstime.com

NOTE: This news story, previously published on our old site, will have any links removed.read more

A spy would probably try to wear clothes that made him invisible. Failing that, the best thing to wear would be clothes that could take photographs of everything around him, without him seeming to ever click a camera.

BBC News reports that US researchers have created a fabric that can detect the wavelength and direction of light falling on it. When sensors are placed on each individual fiber, they coordinate these signals and can take photographs of the wearer’s surroundings.
read more

Computer criminals could soon be eavesdropping on what you type by analyzing the electromagnetic signals produced by every key press, as a technology that has been available to US intelligence agencies for twenty years finally makes its way into the public domain.

Swiss researchers have done it: By analyzing the signals produced by a person?s keystrokes, they have been able to reproduce what that person typed. BBC news quotes them as declaring that keyboards are “not safe to transmit sensitive information.”
read more