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Government Privacy Wireless Networking

Feds Admit Stingray Can Disrupt Bystanders' Communications 194

linuxwrangler writes The government has fought hard to keep details about use and effects of the controversial Stingray device secret. But this Wired article points to recently released documents in which the government admits that the device can cause collateral damage to other network users. The controversy has heated to the point that Florida senator Bill Nelson has made statements that such devices will inevitably force lawmakers to come up with new ways to protect privacy — a comment that is remarkable considering that the Stingray is produced by Harris Corporation which is headquartered in Nelson's home state.
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Feds Admit Stingray Can Disrupt Bystanders' Communications

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  • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @01:51PM (#49165999) Journal

    The default government stance is that these things are legal, until proven illegal (challenged in court).

    This default stance clearly indicates that our government is against its people. We live in a police state.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by JDAustin ( 468180 )

      How's that hope and change working out?

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:03PM (#49166101)

        About as well as trickle-down economics.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Both of you, stop pretending there's some difference between the parties. Neither party can apparently confront the banking industry. And the industry donates equally to both.

          It's pretty clear who's running the show.

          • Both of you, stop pretending there's some difference between the parties. Neither party can apparently confront the banking industry. And the industry donates equally to both.

            It's pretty clear who's running the show.

            No, it's pretty clear we've known this for a very long time.

            What is perhaps not so clear to people these days is there's not a fucking thing left to be done about it.

            • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:34PM (#49166761)
              Vote 3rd party. But everyone considers that a waste. If everyone did that, we'd have real change, but nobody will. When you are surrounded by dumb people, democracy is the worst form of government. The solution is to move.
              • by xanthines-R-yummy ( 635710 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:39PM (#49166795) Homepage Journal

                Obligatory....

                Kodos: It's true, we are aliens. But what are you going to do about it? It's a two-party system. You have to vote for one of us.
                Man 1: He's right, this is a two-party system.
                Man 2: Well I believe I'll vote for a third-party candidate.
                Kang: Go ahead, throw your vote away.

                • by C0R1D4N ( 970153 )
                  Voting in the primaries is what is really important, there's usually an anti-establishment candidate in every party whether they be Ron Paul or Dennis Kucinich or similar. If you aren't in a "swing state" you may as well vote third party anyway. I have voted third party every presidential election I have voted in because my state always picks the one of the two top guys I would prefer regardless.
              • I used to think that the major parties would change if enough people voted third party. Now, I'm thinking that - were a third party actually a viable contender, the Democrats and Republicans would work together to alter the rules so that the third party candidate(s) would be removed from the ballots. Not that they'd ban the third party candidates (since that wouldn't hold up in court), but they'd put rules in place that the official Democrat and Republican candidates could easily meet but that the third p

              • by TWX ( 665546 )
                For a third-party to work it has to offer more benefits than drawbacks over existing parties. Most third-parties either are single-issue parties that couldn't effectively govern given their lack of stance on other issues, or have declared positions on too many issues that the majority of the voting public do not support.

                The closest that an actual third-party has gotten to success since the modern two major parties took over was when a popular former-member of one of those parties created his own party,
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        How's that hope and change working out?

        Pretty shitty, but infinitely better than another 8 years of republican misrule would have.

        • by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:12PM (#49166189) Homepage Journal

          Better? How, exactly?

          When do we, the peasants, begin to understand that we serve two masters. One master offers us a shit sandwich, so we turn to the other in hopes of a better shit sandwich. At the end of the day, the smartest among the peasants figure out that both masters are shoveling shit from the same damned pile.

          Tell me more about this republican misrule. Perhaps you refer to DHS, and TSA? Or, do you refer to totally meaningless immigration policies that no one enforces? Maybe you're concerned with NSA and it's siblings from the Five Eyes spying on everyone? Maybe you're upset about the totally screwed up tax structure? Go ahead - tell us exactly WHAT the republicans were doing wrong.

          Once you've done that - tell me how we are one iota better off today with the democrat in the White House.

          Only chumps and fools defend either party. Republicans and Democrats are an inbred family, sleeping together for the past three generations.

          "infinitely better", huh? Go ahead, and tell us HOW it is better.

          • by Holi ( 250190 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:25PM (#49166309)
            Well the Supreme Court would be very different for 1. Actually that may be the most important. If we had had a Republican president we certainly would not have Sotamayor and Kagen. That in itself is a huge thing that will have repercussions far beyond Obama's presidency.
          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward

            More people can get health insurance, and fewer Americans are dying in wars, than under the previous administration. Also, more and more queer people can get married and enjoy the various legal benefits of that.

            You can condemn both parties (although you carefully don't say what you'd actually prefer, and whether a majority of the country would agree with you) without saying they're both completely identical. They're not, and only fools think they are.

            • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

              They are very identical in one VERY IMPORTANT way: They'll both push their agenda of the day, but in the end, they'll keep ignoring the real problems and protecting their benefactors (which is a part of the real problem) along with distributing the money to friends, family and allies.

              And there's nothing you can do about it.

              In that way, they are identical. Now, their agenda du jour... in the end is pretty much irrelevant. Your so called health insurance, we have it in France since about 65 years now. It's 2B

              • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

                One exception I have to note (since Runaway1956 is citing me) is that gay marriage *is* the only thing that won't cost anything and is a real social benefit. THIS is something positive.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Health insurance. I'm paying considerably MORE for my health insurance than I did in years past. All the suckers who THINK that they are paying for their new health insurance are deluded - they can only get that insurance with the aid of SUBSIDIES. How long do you think the subsidies are going to last?

              Read Pieroxy's comment below. France's version of Obolacare is bankrupt - and so are all the other versions of Obolacare around the world.

              Queer people marry? Nope. It doesn't happen. You can have a lega

              • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

                Health insurance. I'm paying considerably MORE for my health insurance than I did in years past.

                If Obamacare had never passed, would you be paying considerably MORE for your health insurance now than you did in years past? Yes, yes you would, because they insurers raise rates sky-high because they can. The law gives them a great deflection tool, though, a way for the insurers to try to claim that they wouldn't have raised rates if that law hadn't forced them to. What a joke.

                Queer people marry? Nope. It doesn't happen. You can have a legal fiction built in the image of marriage, but queers can't marry. And - you're going to give CREDIT TO OBAMA FOR THAT???? Utter nonsense. Activist judges around the nation deserve the blame for that. They have been moving forward with this agenda for the past twenty years.

                Depending on the state, some gay people can marry. I certainly did. But you're right, Obama deserves credit merely for going with

          • tell me how we are one iota better off today with the democrat in the White House.

            Your justifiable disappointment in both parties leads you to renouncing both of them equally, which is not justifiable in the slightest.

            Had a Republican won, we would've still been capturing enemies to be held in Guantanamo — instead of simply killing them [theguardian.com]. Osama bin Laden would've been on trial, rather than fallen victim to extrajudicial killing [rall.com].

            Putin would not have dared to invade Ukraine. Gaddafi — who has ma

            • Putin would not have dared to invade Ukraine.

              Ya, because fear of a neocon president sure scared him away from invading Georgia.

      • Stingray was already being used by LAPD in 2006:
        http://www.laweekly.com/news/l... [laweekly.com]

        Maybe this is an issue that actually has little to do with the President and is just a result of the general move across local, state, and federal government that we prefer less privacy if it *sounds* like it is making us safer.

      • How's that regurgitating hackneyed phrases working out for *you*?
    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:00PM (#49166081)

      how about the right to privacy in communication and freedom from unlawful* interference in personal, family and associative affairs as guaranteed by not only the US Constitution but also the UN Declaration of Human Rights?

      *for a metric, read: "any activity which does not meet standards of the Statute Law, or moral or societal standards of behaviour"

      Also consider the fact that the Constitution ofthe United States specifically limits the function of Government to that which is SPECIFICALLY ALLOWED by Law; any activity which is NOT specifically legislated for is in fact ILLEGAL for Government to carry out. As always, the Constitution wins out absent an Amendment, ergo warrantless wiretapping or active unlawful interference in communications is unconstitutional hence ILLEGAL.

      • by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:13PM (#49166199) Homepage

        Also consider the fact that the Constitution ofthe United States specifically limits the function of Government to that which is SPECIFICALLY ALLOWED by Law; any activity which is NOT specifically legislated for is in fact ILLEGAL for Government to carry out. As always, the Constitution wins out absent an Amendment, ergo warrantless wiretapping or active unlawful interference in communications is unconstitutional hence ILLEGAL.

        The FBI's activities are specifically authorized by a host of laws [wikipedia.org]. That you didn't bother to learn about them doesn't invalidate their existence.

        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:31PM (#49166351)

          which ones allow them to proactively interfere with radio frequency communications?

          • by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:06PM (#49166591) Homepage

            28 U.S. Code 534(a)(1), 47 CFR 2.701(b), and 47 CFR 15.9, to start.

            Of course, let's not forget 47 CFR 15.15(c), which effectively says that interference is unavoidable and should be minimized, and when considered along with 47 CFR 15.5(c), you'll have a hard time convincing a judge (which is really what matters, legally) that the FBI's actions were actually illegal, unless the FCC has told them to stop. Good luck getting that to happen.

            • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:27PM (#49166729)

              on 28 U.S. Code 534(a)(1): the only two Authorities for such action are judicial administration and national defense. Unless the United States Government has declared war on its own citizens (it hasn't as far as the White House still being vertical evidences), then neither Authority can be invoked since the activity is also warrantless and proactive.

              On 47 CFR 2.701(b), and 47 CFR 15.9: this requires LAWFUL AUTHORITY (ie a WARRANT from a JUDGE), which requires JUST CAUSE.

              Stingray is in direct violation of 47 CFR 15.15(c) *by design*, therefore its use would be illegal even if all other conditions were met. For "authorised users of the radio frequency spectrum", read: "ANYBODY WHO USES A CELLPHONE!"

              See, I *can* read.

              • on 28 U.S. Code 534(a)(1): the only two Authorities for such action are judicial administration and national defense. Unless the United States Government has declared war on its own citizens (it hasn't as far as the White House still being vertical evidences), then neither Authority can be invoked since the activity is also warrantless and proactive.

                On 47 CFR 2.701(b), and 47 CFR 15.9: this requires LAWFUL AUTHORITY (ie a WARRANT from a JUDGE), which requires JUST CAUSE.

                Stingray is in direct violation of 47 CFR 15.15(c) *by design*, therefore its use would be illegal even if all other conditions were met. For "authorised users of the radio frequency spectrum", read: "ANYBODY WHO USES A CELLPHONE!"

                See, I *can* read.

                Now that we've established you can read, perhaps you can take a few minutes and read a bit more on the one called the PATRIOT Act.

                Pay particular attention to the parts that state "FUCK YOU VERY MUCH" when questioning the legality or priority of the Act above any other law in existence today.

                I believe you'll find all of the legal transgressions you're looking for in there.

                • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

                  No, the NSA warrantless wiretapping program in the United States is not legal under the patriot act, because the act is still in violation of the constitution. Same goes for the 2008 FISA amendments as they're spawned from section 213.

                  http://www.studentpulse.com/ar... [studentpulse.com]

                  spank you happy helpy.

                  • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

                    and there's really no such thing as a retro warrant because the application has to be in before any surveillance can take place, and sneak-peak is right out (Fourth Amendment, dash it all!)

                  • The last line of your source:

                    Section 213 of the Patriot Act is constitutional, and has never been found to be otherwise by any court.

          • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:08PM (#49166611)

            and also, where is the notion of a mass dragnet ALLOWED by the constitution?

            its not. never was allowed. any dragnets were always illegal (not to mention immoral).

            they over-reach with this mass surveillance stuff. they know they are on borrowed time and that, eventually, we the people will not tolerate it. it may take years to get the laws fixed; meanwhile, they enjoy the fruits of the poison tree and enjoy their little spy-fest.

        • The FBI's activities are specifically authorized by a host of laws. That you didn't bother to learn about them doesn't invalidate their existence.

          There is nothing there or in the NTIA that allows law enforcement agencies to violate FCC rules, especially without a warrant. Please point out the specific law that, in your opinion, authorizes such activities by law enforcement.

          And even if such interference was allowed, that still does not invalidate 4th Amendment protections both for the intended targeted individual(s) nor the innocent people in the area whose civil rights are violated in the course of Stingray use.

          Strat

        • by ebyrob ( 165903 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @03:16PM (#49166667)

          What part of "Congress shall make no law..." don't you understand? That these "federal laws" are even on the books is just proof of how far we've strayed from constitutional government. That everything nowadays is just wedged under the "commerce clause" is the tip of the Hindenburg.

    • The default government stance is that these things are legal, until proven illegal (challenged in court).

      And how exactly is that different from any other government in the world?

      Perhaps the more interesting question is how you would rather the system worked. Should new tools and tactics be assumed to be illegal for law enforcement use until such new developments are added to a whitelist of legal tools? Under such a system, what is the defense against a criminal enterprise using that whitelist as a simple checklist for their opsec? Do you expect that the whitelist changes (with proper bureaucratic review) would

    • when they stop making spyboxes, they can make firewalls. Da Gummint taught them a lot.

    • by sycodon ( 149926 )

      Clearly didn't work out too well for this guy. [fox4news.com]

    • The default government stance is that these things are legal, until proven illegal

      That sounds reasonable — it is certainly the stance, I'd like applied to me.

      This default stance clearly indicates that our government is against its people.

      Huh?! Why? Where? What is the "clear" indication of this antagonism?

      We live in a police state.

      We are certainly witnessing increasingly assertive police. But, as one well-moderated poster inquired [slashdot.org] in an earlier discussion: "If the Federal Government can't determine wha

    • by Marful ( 861873 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @07:00PM (#49168061)
      The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act makes it a federal crime to unlawfully access any computer device that is used by an financial institution, government institution or a private computer that is used for interstate commerce or communication.

      This already covers cell phones as they are 1.) Computers, 2.) Used for interstate communication and 3.) Used for interstate commerce.

      Given that the Stingray Devices operate by performing a "Man in the Middle" style attack by masquerading as a legitimate cell tower and thereby intercepting cellular data from all users in the vicinity of the Stingray Device (regardless of whether they are the target or not), and part of the cellular data transfer requires (non-secure) authentication (identifying carrier, ID, etc), I fail to see how use of a Stingray Device is legal even via a warrant.

      First, the basic nature of the Stingray Device requires a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to operate (connect to the cell phone and send/receive data). Combine this with how the Stingray Device cannot operate in such a fashion that it targets a single individual; it intercepts ALL communications in it's area. This device is the epitome of unconstitutional. It cannot even be operated legally with a warrant because it can't narrow it's target to a single individual and thus runs afoul of the 4th Amendment (in addition to 18 U.S. Code 1030).
  • by Etherwalk ( 681268 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @01:53PM (#49166023)

    Use of a stingray then arguably becomes a violation of 47 U.S.C. Section 333, prohibiting the causing of interference with radio communications.

    http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/U... [gpo.gov]

    https://www.fcc.gov/encycloped... [fcc.gov]

  • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @01:54PM (#49166029)

    One of the documented functions of StingRay is as a local cell jammer (more specifically, a DOSbox). This it can do by several methods: by intercepting cellphone signals by imitating a tower and redirecting those signals to dev/null; by flooding an area with local RF; by causing any or all phones in a given area around it or around a target phone to flood RF... Stingray is so small it can be carried in a pocket.

    (I've seen one, it's about the size of a Motorola GP200 and called "Gossamer", made by the same corporation that makes Stingray II (the current rackmount system)).

  • by redelm ( 54142 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @01:57PM (#49166055) Homepage

    Is this StingRay thing even FCC licenced? What about the operators?

    Looks like it performs indiscriminate MiTM attacks. Particularly egregious, since it could probably be tuned with software to only intercept those EEIDs for which a warrent was issued.

    No time for a warrent? Then how did the device magically appear on-scene? It was called-out, and so could a warrent be.

    • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:25PM (#49166313)

      Is this StingRay thing even FCC licenced? What about the operators?

      The operators are FBI. They aren't subject to FCC rules or licenses. NTIA [doc.gov].

      • by redelm ( 54142 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:37PM (#49166403) Homepage
        1) I thought some operators were locals.

        2) NTIA may well help manage spectrum, and the Feds certainly can use their reserved spectrum however they wish. But that does not grant them immunity to use any spectrum they wish, however they wish. Carriers (and their customers) have paid dearly for that spectrum which gives it many of the characteristics of private property. There certainly is a well-established expectation of privacy. (This is supposed to be a nation of laws not lawmen.)

        • 1) I thought some operators were locals.

          Feds admit that Stingray...

          2) NTIA may well help manage spectrum, and the Feds certainly can use their reserved spectrum however they wish. But that does not grant them immunity to use any spectrum they wish, however they wish.

          Please show me where I said otherwise. There is a significant difference between "not subject to the laws of X" and "not subject to any laws."

          • That's because the feds have been studiously trying to keep them under wraps, but the majority of users do appear to be locals, for ex the ACLU's tracking page here [aclu.org]. The FBI has been interfering with court cases where they are filing amicus briefs and injunctions to attempt to prevent disclosures of local use of stingrays, which is why the feds are *particularly* prominent in this.
    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      even if were a product available to the public it couldn't be because it is *designed* to interfere with radio communications at a fundamental and highly targetable level.

  • by jythie ( 914043 )
    While I know it would never happen, I would love to see the FCC get involved in this. Spectrum is kinda their domain and stingray was messing it up, so this is a good example of one agency giving another a bit of a black eye. I would totally chip in some popcorn and a comfy couch for watching that fight.
    • While I know it would never happen, I would love to see the FCC get involved in this. Spectrum is kinda their domain

      But the FBI use of spectrum is not.

      • While I know it would never happen, I would love to see the FCC get involved in this. Spectrum is kinda their domain

        But the FBI use of spectrum is not.

        You keep insisting, not only in this article but also in other Stingray-related /. articles, that the NTIA allows the Feds to do whatever they want radio-spectrum-wise which simply and plainly is not the case.

        I have to wonder if either you're that stubborn & obtuse, or do you get paid to shill?

        Strat

        • You keep insisting, not only in this article but also in other Stingray-related /. articles, that the NTIA allows the Feds to do whatever they want radio-spectrum-wise

          I have said no such thing. In fact, whenever people like you try to twist what I've actually said into this lie, I've corrected you in public.

          Once again, I find myself wasting time responding to people who either cannot understand the difference between "not subject to FCC rules" and "not subject to any rules", or who deliberately ignore the difference so they can lie about what I've said.

          That's especially stupid to try, given that you have just let slip that I've actually said they are subject to NTIA

          • You keep insisting, not only in this article but also in other Stingray-related /. articles, that the NTIA allows the Feds to do whatever they want radio-spectrum-wise

            I have said no such thing. In fact, whenever people like you try to twist what I've actually said into this lie, I've corrected you in public.

            Once again, I find myself wasting time responding to people who either cannot understand the difference between "not subject to FCC rules" and "not subject to any rules", or who deliberately ignore the difference so they can lie about what I've said.

            There you go again, trying to sidetrack and obfuscate the central issue. Neither the NTIA nor any other federal law or regulation allows Stingrays to be legally used in the manner that law enforcement has used them. That's why Stingray use by LE has been so secretive in the first place.

            The fact is that the US government has been taken over by

            • There you go again, trying to sidetrack and obfuscate the central issue. Neither the NTIA nor any other federal law or regulation allows Stingrays to be legally used in the manner that law enforcement has used them.

              Show me where I said it does or admit that you lied. I never said did. I've told I never said it did. Yet you keep on...

              The SOLE thing I replied to was the comment about getting the FCC to deal with federal use of this. That's the ONLY issue I replied to.

              You are free to rant on about the government, but stop deliberately misinterpreting what I've said.

      • While I know it would never happen, I would love to see the FCC get involved in this. Spectrum is kinda their domain

        But the FBI use of spectrum is not.

        Why is that? Is there an exception to the law or to FCC rules which allows police officers to operate unlicensed radio transmitters? If so, when may they do so?

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      The device was approved by the FCC. However the approval process is not in this case transparent. We don't know whether the FCC took into account whether the device's capacity to create interference, or whether they may have played favorites.

      One thing we can be certain about is that the FCC didn't worry about Constitutional or laws that protect citizen privacy, and certainly not the use of the devices without a warrant. That's not their bailiwick.

      So to summarize the FCC approved this device but we don't k

  • Stingray detector? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:19PM (#49166257)

    So I wonder if all of this excess interference means that a Stingray detector could be created? Privacy minded volunteers could run a SDR [wikipedia.org] that looks for an increase in the noise floor or other indications that a Stingray is in use, and update a central repository for a real-time map of everywhere a Stingray is in use.

    If Law Enforcement won't reveal when they are using it, maybe citizens can find out out their own.

    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      As long as they weren't using the AMPS frequencies it should be legal. Speaking of the AMPS frequencies, when are we going to rescind the law making listening to those frequencies illegal, it's not like that law is needed anymore.
    • This is an awesome idea.

      From the state's perspective, the worst that happens here is that criminals can avoid creating accessible evidence, but that comes at a significant cost for each private phone call, making their entire operation more costly. That in itself is a bit of justice, and a hindrance on coordinated criminal activity.

      Normal law-abiding citizens can choose to be private or not, at a socially-acceptable low cost for the few times privacy might be desired. The truly paranoid law-abiding citizens

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      I have one. It's called a Yaesu VX-5 pocket personal transceiver. It only covers the analogue (voice) channels below 1GHz (covers 450 and 800MHz gear) (doesn't go higher than 1GHz) but if there's a jamming signal being emitted at those frequencies that thing'll pick it up.

      (I wouldn't bother to be using it at anything other than a major public gathering, since that's the most likely place LE would use blanket jammers - not that they''re likely to in the UK since they use TETRA which piggybacks any available

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      In the past the local network dropped to an older standard depending on the version of the IMSI catcher and the network standard it used?
      A few projects have been mentioned to help understand the local network conditions and then show the user changes.
      Phone Firewall Identifies Rogue Cell Towers Trying To Intercept Your Calls (09.03.14)
      http://www.wired.com/2014/09/c... [wired.com]
  • by mr_mischief ( 456295 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:22PM (#49166279) Journal

    Harris won't care about restrictions on Stingray devices. They'll still sell them. They also sell actual cellular radio equipment, TV broadcasting stuff, and AM and FM radio broadcasting stuff. If it's a big tower with antennae on it and a shed next to it, Harris probably produced some part of the equipment involved.

  • by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:24PM (#49166303) Homepage Journal

    Really, people - the admission that stingray "might" interfere with other user's telephone service is a no-brainer. Radio waves are generally transmitted in a spherical - or, more accurately, a donut shaped - direction. There ARE beam antenna, but who is going to attach a honking huge beam to a pocket sized transmitter? So - wherever this thing is turned on, it is GUARANTEED to interfere with normal usage, in all directions, out to the maximum range of the transmitter. In effect, they're hoping to shoot one fish in a barrel, but they're actually dragging a mile's long net through the ocean. Idiots.

    • Radio waves are generally transmitted in a spherical - or, more accurately, a donut shaped - direction. There ARE beam antenna, but who is going to attach a honking huge beam to a pocket sized transmitter? So - wherever this thing is turned on, it is GUARANTEED to interfere with normal usage, in all directions, out to the maximum range of the transmitter.

      Except the antennas on cell systems are not omnidirectional, and they haven't been for many years. They are both directional and phased, which means they can direct the signal towards the intended receiver.

      • I would really like to have that demonstrated to me. My telephone cares little which way I point it. Nor does my telephone much care which side of the tower I am on. Maybe the donut is flattened on one axis, but we all know that there aren't tens of thousands of antenna on the tower, each one mounted on independent gimbals, tracking each user.

        • I would really like to have that demonstrated to me. My telephone cares little which way I point it.

          Your telephone is not an antenna on a cell system. I could have been more explicit by saying "the antenna on a cell system tower", but I assumed most people would know what I was talking about when I referred to plural antennas.

          You cell phone is half the connection, and while it is approximately omnidirectional, the antennas at the other, higher power transmitter end, are not.

          Maybe the donut is flattened on one axis, but we all know that there aren't tens of thousands of antenna on the tower, each one mounted on independent gimbals, tracking each user.

          You missed the critical word "phased". Please refer to here [youtube.com], here [wikipedia.org], or here [antenna-theory.com] for more info. Suffice to say, your hyperbole that on

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      they appear to use a base-loaded helical whip on the pocket-portable version, which is called "Gossamer". The whole thing's about the size of a GP200 and the antenna's about the size of a 5/8 HAM rubberduck. In fact, it might well be a HAM rubberduck - at 450MHz it'd be equivalent to 23/8 wavelength (which would work, actually - my VX-5 is usually equipped with a 2m antenna which does a wonderful job at 70cm).

      • ... 5/8 HAM rubberduck..."

        A rubber duck antenna is not 5/8 wave. It is an intentionally shortened antenna used only because it is inconvenient to have a real, resonant antenna on a handheld.

        A 5/8 wave antenna for 2m is (936/144)*(5/8) feet, or 49 inches long, and I doubt that you have such a length of wire on your HT. At 70cm, it's 936/440 * (5/8) or 15.9 inches long.

        A 5.8 wave 2m will actually not work as well at 70cm as at 2m even though one is the third harmonic (almost) of the other, because at 70cm the antenna becomes 15/8

        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

          the fuck are you crapping on about? A helical whip is the stated length wrapped around an air core and sleeved in PU or rubber. HENCE THE FUCKING NAME.

          • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

            FYI: I have a 7/8 70cm antenna, homebuilt into a rubber duck sleeve. It's an inch and a half long.

  • That is how I read these story headlines. Exactly how I read them, a fact which has been obvious since the whole fiasco with NDA agreements came out. They know they are not respecting people's rights, they KNOW what they are doing would not withstand an hour of public scrutiny.

    In short, the federal government is harboring criminals who belong in prison, and is currently helping protect them and pay them to commit more crimes rather than admit the truth.

  • We need to make laws to force the public to stop making inquiries as it's seriously imposing undue police and government right to privacy. We need to incarcerate these people and lock them up for twice as long as people who get caught smoking a joint - yes for life!!!

    /sarcasm

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The cell phone is now a beacon, gps tracker, facial recognition system, keeps text and offers voice prints.
      If a person is a journalist or meeting a journalist understand that just been near a journalist with a connected cell phone can be useful to track that meeting.
      The ability to turn on the microphone is another issue.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:57PM (#49166541)
    You know. . . .

    If folks like Anonymous and / or Lizard Squad really wanted something to do that would prove their value, they would turn their attention upon something like this. They would certainly wield considerably more respect were they to apply their skills by obtaining useful information on matters such as these. Granted, such information would be worth quite a bit on the black market, but putting a three letter agency under the public spotlight for using potentially illegal tech would be far more satisfying I think. ( Especially when it's our own Law Enforcement types getting caught doing so ) Not to mention ultimate bragging rights of being the group / individual responsible for it.

    The obvious target being the user and / or maintenance manual or even detailed specifications on what the Stingray units are and what they are capable of.

    Orders of magnitude more important than knocking Sony or Xbox-Live offline for a few days or defacing some website out of protest.

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