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Question:

Is this a motion sensor and can it record me?

In my house there is an adt security system and there ante these little white things in the corner of the wall about 3 inches tall and 2 inches thick and they don't look like cameras because they don't have a lense or anything just like a plastic white screen and whenever you walk bye a red light comes on so I was just really wondering what they were. (I'm just asking on here because I don't wanna ask my mom)

Answer:

Don't say anything about it to her. Who cares what she thinks. She is being an idiot. You are doing her a favor cleaning that. And you told her the cause of the problem. And if the cause of her problem happens to be a characteristic of her racial group, then it is what it is. This is like a woman complaining about symptoms of pregnancy and then calling a man an anti-feminist bastard when he says she should take a pregnancy test. Differences between people and how their bodies work are real. We don't solve racism or sexism by pretending we are all the same; that is naive, ignorant, and impossible. Instead, we need to accept that we are how we are and there are certain characteristics that derive from it. And pointing it out is not being critical or hateful, it is being honest and seeing reality the way it is. We have adopted a false belief that if we ignore the problem, it will go away with racism and sexism. Instead, we need to ask why there is a problem to begin with. And the problem is that some people are stupid and insecure enough to believe in artificial barriers between people for superficial criteria. And rather than addressing how moronic that is, we simply accept that fallacy as the way of the world, and then frame our discussion around solving an imaginary problem.
Yes it will. The winter weather condition tyre will wear extremely rapidly on dry and warm road surfaces.
The same as any other light ray. Use a non-reflective surface to capture it as heat, or a quantum reaction specific to uv photons, such as is used in florescent lights, some photovoltaic detectors and now nanodots, to transfer the energy into single electrons or molecules.

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