posted on May, 18 2007 @ 12:35 PM
Interesting stuff, nobody seems to know what they really do,though there are all sorts of ideas.
Neurocam International
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neurocam is an international organization that was first widely known about after it advertised on billboards in Melbourne, Australia in November
2004.
In November of 2004, a billboard was placed on Alexandra Parade. It contained the website URL and the slogan "get out of your mind".
Until recently (January 2007), people were invited by the group's web site to join Neurocam. Those contacting it to do so received either rejection
or acceptance letters via electronic mail, signed with such names as Maxwell Knight, Charles Hastings, Bridget Fischer, Neville Harris, and Iocus
Severus. Those that joined Neurocam were given assignments to perform by a set date. In January of 2007 Neurocam.com anounced that it would no longer
be accepting online applications.
The obscure nature of the assignments, the lack of information on the web site (which at one time contained a long, and of course not independently
verifiable, list proclaiming what Neurocam is not) have only fueled speculation. Some have speculated that this was indeed the intent, however the
organization itself denies that.
Neurocam International explicitly states in every assignment that operatives are not to discuss and relate their Neurocam experiences until after the
assignment due date, however in some cases operatives may not reveal any information at all. They are indifferent to public records of operative
engagements with Neurocam but it does affect the security rating of assignments in receipt by the operative, according to Charles Hastings on
Operative Wintermute's blog [1].
The organization claims to have been around in excess of 30 years. They claim to fund their operations via private investors and government
contacts.
So far, the objectives of Neurocam remain a mystery. Some have speculated that it has to do with neurology, as in 2004 a CD-ROM was handed to an
operative named Xade. Upon review of the disc, it contained many blueprints and files containing what was an assumed neurological device. In mid 2005,
a substance named Compound H67T was mentioned many times in conjunction with Neurocam, specifically by operatives higher up in the organization.
Claims were made that the substance had complications when tested on rhesus macaque, tonkean macaque, and pan troglodytes verus primates. It was also
noted that experiments on homo sapiens would be conducted.