• I-Doser, Virtual Drugs
    77 replies, posted
In a world where illegal drugs run rampant, did getting high just become much easier? An online music site may provide a legal high that is undetectable, has no health side effects, and can be performed at your computer. I-Doser is a new online service that sells musical tracks for prices between $1-$5 per track. Each track in their library is named after a particular drug, both legal and illegal. The tracks are supposed to give the listener a similar experience to that of the drug it is named after. These tracks range from alcohol, to marijuana, to sleep aids, to ecstacy, to crystal meth, to heroine. The site boasts itself as a legal alternative to the illicit drugs that are rampant today. This sounds very interesting, but does it work? In order to understand I-Doser, you need to understand the science behind the service it provides. Each track produces its mental effects through the use of binaural beats. For those of you who are not familiar with binaural beats, it is a concept which states that when two different tones are played in opposite ears, a beating sensation is created in the brain. This beating sensation is the effect of the conflicting electrical signals in your brain’s wiring. Needless to say, headphones are a necessity when trying to experience binaural beats because they allow a different frequency to be played in each ear. In experiments over the last century, binaural beats have been shown to create different states of consciousness within an individual. These states of consciousness are the result of different brain waves that can be induced in a person’s psyche through the beats. If you are familiar with psychology, you know that there are four different sets of waves that are produced in our brain: Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Theta. When these brain waves are mixed and matched, I-Doser threorizes that the listener experiences a drug-like high or state of consciousness. Now that you know the science behind it, we can look at I-Doser and its claims. I-Doser offers countless tracks of just about every drug you can imagine, each one for purchase. Just like I-Tunes, when you purchase a track, you have unlimited use of it. You can play these tracks using the player that you download from their website. If you are interested in testing I-Doser for yourself, the player comes with two free tracks, one of which is supposed to simulate alcohol. It is strongly recommended that you try the sample tracks before you purchase any of the drug tracks because these do not work for everyone. I-Doser states that there are three classes of people: Susceptible to Binaural Beats, Originally Unsusceptible to Binaural Beats, and Immune to Binaural Beats. I-Doser does not offer refunds, so order wisely. The service also makes a very bold claim that I took note of. It states that drug addicts can use these tracks to supplement their drug addictions and break them. This seems like an unfounded statement to me because I can’t figure out how listening to these could possibly aid in fighting a physical addiction. In order to use I-Doser, you must go to a serene location, like your bed, and relax with no distractions but the music. After a while, you should theoretically drift off into another state of conscousness. The final question is whether these drug tracks are safe. I have put considerable research into this and all the sources keep saying that using binaural beats is, in fact, very safe. Apparently the brain will slowly adjust itself back to reality when the track is done playing. Since it does not actually affect your body in any physical way, there is little to worry about. However, the one safety concern I did see was a line saying that these binaural beats had a possibility of causing epileptic seizures in some people, much as bright flashing lights can. Another concern that is not addressed is the possibility of something bad happening while you are “high”. All the same effects as the drug are replicated, so driving after using the alcohol track would be a bad idea. I cannot tell you if I-Doser works or not. That is something you will have to try for yourself. The one thing I will say is that the idea behind it is very fascinating, and the consequences could cause quite a stir. Things like DUI laws and drug testing would be obsolete to some using these beats. This creates an enormous rift in drug laws, since it is essentially a legal drug. The high you get from binaural beats is both undetectable, and as strong as the real thing. It will be very interesting to see the response of the courts and law enforcement if this service ever becomes popular. Get it at [URL="www.i-doser.com/"]www.i-doser.com/[/URL]
so many clocks search
All placebo man. Its one big joke, I tried it, and I'm pretty sure anybody whose been on the internet for any length of time has.
[QUOTE=Erp;20965533]so many clocks search[/QUOTE] the last thread on this i found was January last year
yeah we've had several threads about this, and we came to the conclusion that it's a fake piece of crap
[QUOTE=Sleepy Head;20965557]yeah we've had several threads about this, and we came to the conclusion that it's a fake piece of crap[/QUOTE] Really? Some of them kept me quite relaxed and content.
omg wtf im so high right now
I tried it and it never worked for me. Though I didn't have the patience to sit for half an hour listening to a track when I could just smoke a bowl
[QUOTE=Sealy12103;20965565]Really? Some of them kept me quite relaxed and content.[/QUOTE] Well, yeah, that's what music is supposed to do. You'd have to be an idiot to believe that scientific mumbo jumbo.
I remember this from a thread on heere.. Hrmm.. year or two ago?
Worked for me.
Placebo placebo placebo
They never work for me.
Why are you advertising here?
I tried this stuff years ago, didn't work then and I know it won't work now.
incoming big copypasta: [Quote]Binaural beats may influence functions of the brain besides those related to hearing. This phenomenon is called frequency following response. The concept is that if one receives a stimulus with a frequency in the range of brain waves, the predominant brain wave frequency is said to be likely to move towards the frequency of the stimulus (a process called entrainment).[11] In addition, binaural beats have been credibly documented to relate to both spatial perception & stereo auditory recognition, and, according to the frequency following response, activation of various sites in the brain.[12][13][14][15][16] The stimulus does not have to be aural; it can also be visual[17] or a combination of aural and visual[18] (one such example would be Dreamachine). However, using alpha frequencies with such stimuli can trigger photosensitive epilepsy. Perceived human hearing is limited to the range of frequencies from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz, though Infrasound - sound below 20Hz - still has scientifically observable effects on humans, however, it is not readily audible, especially at low volume levels. While the frequencies of human brain waves are below about 40 Hz. To account for this lack of perception, binaural beat frequencies are used. Beat frequencies of 40 Hz have been produced in the brain with binaural sound and measured experimentally.[19] When the perceived beat frequency corresponds to the delta, theta, alpha, beta, or gamma range of brainwave frequencies, the brainwaves entrain to or move towards the beat frequency.[20] For example, if a 315 Hz sine wave is played into the right ear and a 325 Hz one into the left ear, the brain is entrained towards the beat frequency 10 Hz, in the alpha range. Since alpha range is associated with relaxation, this has a relaxing effect or if in the beta range, more alertness. An experiment with binaural sound stimulation using beat frequencies in the Beta range on some participants and Delta/Theta range in other participants, found better vigilance performance and mood in those on the awake alert state of Beta range stimulation.[21][22] [B]Binaural beat stimulation has been used fairly extensively to induce a variety of states of consciousness, and there has been some work done in regards to the effects of these stimuli on relaxation, focus, attention, and states of consciousness.[2] Studies have shown that with repeated training to distinguish close frequency sounds that a plastic reorganization of the brain occurs for the trained frequencies[23] and is capable of asymmetric hemispheric balancing.[/B][24][/Quote] From [url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaural_beats#Other_uses[/url] I think that if this works, you would have to train your brain, and know the dominant frequencies in your brain currently, which would define your starting frequencies for the audio. I was really interested in this stuff when I was younger, & can confirm that with casual use, it really won't do much, apart from relaxation & fucking with your ears. If you plan on being serious about this kind of stuff, you should get a mind machine (google it) instead of relying on the shitty audio-only apps It's interesting stuff, but also likely to be snake oil. If you want to get high, buy some bud
[QUOTE=GammaFive;20965616]I remember this from a thread on heere.. Hrmm.. year or two ago?[/QUOTE] I wasn't even on FP at the time yet I already knew about this
Placebo effect.
anyone want to upload a sample track for us to try? because im not going to pay for this if it doesnt work lol. So yeah anyone got this and have an mp3 or something for us to test?
[QUOTE=Proj3ct_ZeRo;20965838]anyone want to upload a sample track for us to try? because im not going to pay for this if it doesnt work lol. So yeah anyone got this and have an mp3 or something for us to test?[/QUOTE] Some of it is on youtube. I tried it once. Didn't do jack shit.
Everyone who tried with a MP3 got barely any effect, and that's why: its compression scheme eliminates what you won't "hear", but some of that is important for the effect (basically). Anyway, I seriously doubt there's a placebo effect, because I was very skeptical about iDoser when I first tried it — the [I]orgasm[/I] dose worked wonders, though :rolleyes:
Here we go again *sigh*
Placebo effect bullshit. This is nothing like real drugs, and binaural beats really won't do anything but maybe give you a headache or relax you if that's the effect you want it to have, once again, Placebo effect bullshit. I'll stick to my real drugs thank you very much.
I've tried that God's Hand one which is supposed to be like super hard to listen to and causes you to go speak in tounges and murder babies or some shit. Didn't do anything to me except give me a boner.
[QUOTE=Sealy12103;20965527] may provide a legal high that is undetectable, has [B]no health side effects[/B], and can be performed at your computer.[/QUOTE] If it's safe why should it be illegal?
heh, works for me, pretty cool
placebo, it made me dose out but sure as fuck wasn't a high.
gimme some crackkk
gimme some internet crack
Did you really spend that much time typing that just to get the groans of people who had heard of it YEARS ago?
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