“5G BioShield” USB Sticks Scam to Be Shut Down by British Fraud Department

Last updated September 25, 2021
Written by:
Bill Toulas
Bill Toulas
Infosec Writer
Source: 5G Bioshield

A company is selling “5G BioShield” USB sticks for 283 Pounds Sterling, which is around $350. These are a scam, but do we really need to tell you that? As they claim, one may simply plug in the USB stick in the laptop's port, and it will activate a special nano-layer based on quantum holographic catalyzer technology, essentially balancing and harmonizing the harmful effects of imbalanced electric radiation. They even go to the extent of determining an effective operating diameter for this nonsense, offering two range modes, one for eight meters and one for forty. The "extended range" setting is meant to protect your entire home from 5G, 4G, 3G, 2G, and WiFi radiation.

usb sticks

Source: 5G BioShield

According to what is given on the official website, the "brain" behind the project is Dr. Ilija Lakicevic, who claims to be a research professor at the Max-Planck Institute. This is a man who has stated that he is in possession of secret technology that was originally the work of Nikola Tesla and that he has worked over a decade working on the “truth about the human being and the true universal concepts and Laws of Creation.” If all that sounds like a load of rubbish, it's probably because this is exactly what it is.

tesla god

Source: teslastyle101.com

Someone who has paid $350 for a USB stick would at least expect some sort of a sign that it works. A detectable emission maybe - even one that wouldn’t do anything to block or “balance” any radiation around the user. Or maybe even the reproduction of a high-pitched sound or something. According to a report by PenTestPartners, who bought one of these USBs to test it, the stick is nothing else rather than a regular USB pen drive with a sticker on it. In fact, it is a standard 128MB stick made by Shenzen Tushi Technology Co. Ltd in China.

USB_internals

Source: PenTestPartners

A complete teardown of the device revealed that BioShield hadn’t added anything on the hardware to allow the stick to function as a 5G radiation blocker or balancer. It is just a regular, almost worthless USB stick that costs less than a dollar to buy, but there is a market for those things because of the recent misconceptions regarding 5G. The London Police Action Fraud squad is working towards securing a court order that will help them confiscate the product from any points of sale. At the same time, the London Trading Standards operations director also told the BBC that they consider the USB stick to be a scam.

The global distributors of the 5G BioShield said that they possess historical research and technical information about the product that they can’t disclose and that the high cost of the device reflects the value of the intellectual property rights and the production expenses. Thus, they rejected the notion that the price is unreasonably high.

All that said, if you’re seeking a way to reharmonize the disturbing frequencies arising from the electric fog induced by WiFi and 5G radiation, you’d better use that $350 on a revitalizing experience instead.



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