What was claimed

Vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals and are tagged like cattle with chips from the COVID jab (shown in 'experiment' video)

Our verdict

Inaccurate

Fact-checkers and public health sources explicitly state that vaccinated people do not emit Bluetooth signals, and that COVID-19 vaccines contain no materials capable of transmitting radio waves. Multiple fact-checks confirm COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips or tracking devices, and no official documentation or FOI responses show any wireless-tagging components in approved vaccines.

All 3 AI systems agree8 sources citedChecked Jun 27, 2026

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Key findings

The 'experiment' video shows proof that the COVID vaccine causes Bluetooth tagging.

Incorrect96%
1 AI checked

Vaccinated people are tagged like cattle with chips from the COVID jab

Incorrect98%
All 3 AIs agree

An 'experiment' video proves microchipping of vaccinated people

Incorrect98%
1 AI checked

An 'experiment' video shows that vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals and are chipped

Incorrect99%
3 of 4 AIs agree·Perplexity: Misleading

COVID vaccines are used to tag people like cattle

Incorrect99%
1 AI checked

Detailed Analysis

The claim that vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals and are chipped like cattle is directly contradicted by multiple authoritative fact-checks and scientific sources. COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips or any components capable of wireless signal emission, and videos claiming this have been debunked as misinformation.

Why this verdict

  • The claim that vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals and are chipped like cattle is directly contradicted by multiple authoritative fact-checks and scientific sources.
  • COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips or any components capable of wireless signal emission, and videos claiming this have been debunked as misinformation.

Claims checked

Vaccinated people are tagged like cattle with chips from the COVID jab

Incorrect96%
Multiple fact-checks confirm COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips or tracking devices, and no official documentation or FOI responses show any wireless-tagging components in approved vaccines.[1] [2] [4] [5]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals

Incorrect98%
Fact-checkers and public health sources explicitly state that vaccinated people do not emit Bluetooth signals, and that COVID-19 vaccines contain no materials capable of transmitting radio waves.[1] [2] [3] [4] [8]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

An 'experiment' video shows that vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals and are chipped

Misleading90%
Videos claiming to demonstrate Bluetooth signals from vaccinated people have been analyzed and debunked; the detected Bluetooth MAC addresses belong to nearby electronic devices, not human bodies or vaccines.[1] [2] [4] [7]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

What other AI think

Every specific claim in this statement is false and has been thoroughly debunked by health authorities, regulators, and fact-checkers. COVID-19 vaccines contain no microchips, emit no Bluetooth signals, and the "experiment" videos cited as evidence were either jokes or hoaxes misrepresented as proof. This is dangerous health misinformation with no credible scientific basis.

Why this verdict

  • Every specific claim in this statement is false and has been thoroughly debunked by health authorities, regulators, and fact-checkers.
  • COVID-19 vaccines contain no microchips, emit no Bluetooth signals, and the "experiment" videos cited as evidence were either jokes or hoaxes misrepresented as proof.
  • This is dangerous health misinformation with no credible scientific basis.

Claims checked

An 'experiment' video proves microchipping of vaccinated people

Incorrect98%
Viral videos purporting to show microchip readers detecting chips in vaccinated arms were either jokes or hoaxes. The original creator of one widely-shared video explicitly stated it was a joke.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals

Incorrect99%
COVID-19 vaccines contain no electronic components capable of emitting Bluetooth or any wireless signals. Doctors, scientists, and regulators unanimously confirm this is impossible.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Vaccinated people are tagged with chips from the COVID jab

Incorrect99%
Official ingredient lists from the FDA, CDC, and WHO show no microchips or tracking devices in any authorized COVID-19 vaccine. The technology for a chip small enough to pass through a needle does not exist.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The main claims are false. Official CDC material says COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips, and fact-checkers found the Bluetooth video does not show vaccinated people emitting signals. (archive.cdc.gov)

Why this verdict

  • The main claims are false.
  • Official CDC material says COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips, and fact-checkers found the Bluetooth video does not show vaccinated people emitting signals.

Claims checked

The 'experiment' video shows proof that the COVID vaccine causes Bluetooth tagging.

Incorrect96%
Fact-checks of the circulating clip say it only shows nearby Bluetooth connections and does not prove vaccinated people are transmitting signals. The video therefore does not establish the claim. (leadstories.com)

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Vaccinated people emit Bluetooth signals.

Incorrect99%
There is no evidence that COVID-19 vaccination makes people broadcast Bluetooth signals. CDC materials reject related magnetic or electromagnetic myths, and reviews of the viral video found it did not prove such signals. (stacks.cdc.gov)

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

People are tagged like cattle with chips from the COVID jab.

Incorrect99%
CDC states COVID-19 vaccines do not contain microchips. Ingredient information and independent fact-checking also do not support any implanted tracking chip claim. (archive.cdc.gov)

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

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