Quote from: pailryder on Sep 30, 2012, 09:48 AMAs a data collection system, the digital is vastly superior to the analog in every respect.Ask the man who owns one.Wrong, they collect the same data and produce the same charts. Computerized versions simply make the polygrapher feel fancy. And by pure definition, analog instruments capture more data as the digital only samples the analog signal. Yes, I meant Backster, thanks for the correction.
Quote from: stefano on Sep 29, 2012, 04:20 PMhe is under the illusion that a digital instrument is superior to an analog which is simply not true
QuoteThe polygraph is the brainchild of a CIA scientist
Quote from: Vadius_Chammellius on Aug 19, 2010, 04:24 PMHey, all I know is:
When I first came to antipolygraph.org, the site was way down on the list if you typed the word 'polygraph' into Google.
Now, when you type the word 'polygraph' into Google, the first hit is the Wikededia entry which includes a reference to the National Academy for Sciences report, basically saying that polygraph is a load of pseudo-scientific garbage.
The second hit is antipolygraph.org.
Polygraph Place, which looks pretty pro-polygraph, is the 8th or 9th hit. Everything prior to Polygraph Place is anti-polygraph.
In other words, the polygraph's days are numbered. Polygraphs tend to intellectually cocoon themselves the same way religious nuts do: It's true because they SAY it's true, and they're closed-minded to any other possibility. When the day comes that these stupid 'tests' are illegal (and the day is out there) polygraphs will be shocked to find themselves unemployed.
But I definitely think things are getting better, not worse. The federal agency from whom I recently rescinded interest was SHOCKED when I withdrew from processing. The more people learn, the harder time these places will have recruiting the very type of people they CLAIM to want.
So there!
Quote from: whoa_nelly on Aug 25, 2010, 12:17 AM....how did that happen? In any case back on topic, to respond to Irish, this isn't a case so much where Federal law supersedes state law, it's rather the fact that the Federal gov is not subject to state law. Although the NSA is located in Maryland (and presumably it's employees pay MD state income tax) the NSA is NOT PART of Maryland, hence they do not have to abide by MD state law, assuming the law will interfere with the NSA's duties i.e. to polygraph folks.
I think Minnesota also disallows the polygraph for employment purposes.
Quote from: pailryder on Aug 20, 2010, 10:46 AMEPPA was needed and, in my opinion, improved greatly the use of polygraph in the private workplace. But if the protections of EPPA are to be extended to the governmental workplace, which political party will advance that cause? Repubs will buy the national security argument. Demos? I think poly is far from the top of their agenda.