QuoteBut, you know, I think the machine can be beat with proper mental training.One thing is clear: you certainly don't have the mental capacity.
Quote from: cesium_133 on Oct 10, 2012, 02:44 AMCuriouskat, I was on federal probation (and freely admit it) when I was poly'd.
You were on federal probation, and were nonetheless able to obtain a security clearance? Very impressive!
Quote from: i lied and beat the poly on Sep 11, 2012, 11:20 PMUgh, It is always the "Pro-Polygraph" community that argues that nobody can beat their machine, that their magical machine is infallible. I hate to tell you this but once people know how the polygraph process works, it is easy to beat. Controlled breathing is simply breathing normally (not breathing too fast or slow as a person lying or with something to hide may do). A polygrapher can't tell you to "stop breathing normally" as that would not make any since.I'm always glad to learn of more incidences of applicants successfully "beating" the polygraph, particularly at the f*cking CIA.
Once you know how the polygraph bullshit game works, you know that without a confession the worst thing a polygrapher can concluded is that you are "suspected" of something. Polygraphers want confessions. I didn't confess. And I wasn't scared of the poly because I convinced myself it was junk and didn't worry about all the naughty things I've done in the past.
If you do you research, you will learn that the polygraph does not work on those educated by it. Especially closed-minded individuals like myself who also do not believe in voodoo, Ouija board, magic spells, crystal balls, psychic readings, ghosts, or other nonsense...including a magical machine that can read your inner thoughts.
The polygraph is nothing but a crappy tool that measures your sweat, blood pressure, breathing, and other things that doctors can also measure on you in a hospital. Good for it, the polygraph knows when my breathing changes and when I burp. So what? If you relax, don't confess, educate yourself on this stupid game, and keep your mind pre-occupied with exciting thoughts, you can beat the poly.
And if you are deemed to be "suspected" of deception or something stupid, it is probably because the polygrapher is pissed that he/she couldn't coerce a confession from you. Suspicions mean nothing and are probably inevitable, as the polygraphers have to ding so many people for one reason or another to keep their stats up so people think the polygraph actually works. Suspicions without evidence don't even hold water in traffic court.
It is junk. I've beaten the poly for a top secret alphabet-soup agency and I'll do it again, and again, and again...

However, calmness, blanking your mind (esp during RQ's), and pumping up your reactions to CQ's has, ah, been of assistance to me. That, and knowing the whole process and all its merdum tauri (Latin), was a large help. We fear what we don't know a lot more than what we do know.
QuoteThe new computerized models are nearly 100% accurate or so case studies have shownPlease cite these case studies. Actually, there is no difference between an analog or digital instrument save for a computer program that scores the charts for knotheads who don't know how.