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Could the government do this to cell phones?
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2023-06-20 at 7:54 PM UTCSo if you have a cell phone in airplane mode or turned off could they have an airplane or something fly over and send out some kind of pulse so it could be detected and read/located?
I know that's kind of how RFID works. Could they do it to a SIM card?
I'm just curious. I read in the middle east or somewhere where the CIA was doing something evil, they wouldn't trust turning a phone off but using Faraday cages and whatnot. I think this was before smartphones. -
2023-06-20 at 8:10 PM UTCThat sounds possible, I would assume yes they have hundreds of these, any electronic device is vulnerable in some way or another, I remember seeing a few different RF things, they have A LOT of different ways and every time I read these I feel like I learn something new like OH SHIT THATS CLEVER
these fucking names though lmrao. I think the ANGRYNEIGHBOR product line has a few RF products
and these are just the old ones that were leaked, i'm sure they have many more -
2023-06-20 at 8:13 PM UTC
Originally posted by the man who put it in my hood That sounds possible, I would assume yes they have hundreds of these, any electronic device is vulnerable in some way or another, I remember seeing a few different RF things, they have A LOT of different ways and every time I read these I feel like I learn something new like OH SHIT THATS CLEVER
these fucking names though lmrao. I think the ANGRYNEIGHBOR product line has a few RF products
and these are just the old ones that were leaked, i'm sure they have many more
Yeah it's always best to assume they could with stuff like that. Ig if a phone only worked on 5G it would limit the range. -
2023-06-20 at 8:21 PM UTCNo.
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2023-06-20 at 9:53 PM UTChttps://www.techdirt.com/2013/07/23/even-powering-down-cell-phone-cant-keep-nsa-tracking-its-location/
yeah tehres a bunch of stuff for phones and a lot of it is way over my head. and if that doesn't work they have 100 other ways probably to get you at either end
anything is vulnerable, just like that movie with the AI. It will invent a way if it has to, if one doesn't exist someone is working on it.
Originally posted by the man who put it in my hood bitcoin also has problems but the "maximalist" BTC skitzos are hardcore about rolling 99 dice in a faraday cage to make wallet seeed phrases, also gotta do it in the dark with loud music playing so the AI can't guesstimate your rolls
Never forget the sound vibrations folks
Originally posted by Rotten Rodney Those all sound like shit
Eagle Eye
with the guy from THE SHIELD, and fucking SHiah LEBUOUGF.
That movie isn't a scary movie about the danger of AI. It's a fucking hero story of glorious technology killing the entire American government, all the kikes, THEY ALL FUCKING DIE
and in the end….. well, I won't spoil it….
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2023-06-21 at 1:32 PM UTCStill no.
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2023-06-21 at 1:51 PM UTCpossibly, even in aeroplane mode or turned off they can register to towers
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2023-06-21 at 1:53 PM UTC
Originally posted by the man who put it in my hood That sounds possible, I would assume yes they have hundreds of these, any electronic device is vulnerable in some way or another, I remember seeing a few different RF things, they have A LOT of different ways and every time I read these I feel like I learn something new like OH SHIT THATS CLEVER
these fucking names though lmrao. I think the ANGRYNEIGHBOR product line has a few RF products
and these are just the old ones that were leaked, i'm sure they have many more
that just converts the digital video signal into rf so it can be picked up by a receiver, not really relevant
***oh the second one looks like it switches USB drivers so it can receive commands wirelessly then run them as either a keyboard or a USB storage device depending on the situation
didn't realise it was two separate thinsgg -
2023-06-21 at 2:26 PM UTC
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2023-06-21 at 2:46 PM UTC
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2023-06-21 at 3:10 PM UTC
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2023-06-21 at 3:12 PM UTC"Can a phone be tracked if it's turned off? A phone that is turned off is difficult to track because it stops sending signals to cell towers. However, the service provider or internet provider can show the last location once it's switched back on."
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2023-06-21 at 3:18 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson "Can a phone be tracked if it's turned off? A phone that is turned off is difficult to track because it stops sending signals to cell towers. However, the service provider or internet provider can show the last location once it's switched back on."
Unless something forces it to emit a signal -
2023-06-21 at 3:36 PM UTC
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2023-06-21 at 3:58 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Not sure about that…the phone being on standby doesn't mean the sim is getting power…it just means the power circuit is.
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson "Can a phone be tracked if it's turned off? A phone that is turned off is difficult to track because it stops sending signals to cell towers. However, the service provider or internet provider can show the last location once it's switched back on."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseband_processor
the baseband processor typically remains in low-power mode even if the phone is switched off, and the code/instruction set for all of them seems to be proprietary so it's very difficult to tell what they can actually do or how they can be triggered remotely.
starting around 20 years ago the NSA has reportedly used a method called 'The Find' to activate powered-down phones in Iraq and Afghanistan, likely how OP described it - flying a plane overhead and spamming a radio signal that forces phones to respond or register to a tower, regardless of whether they're powered on or not.
Snowden talked about that method being refined and used elsewhere but I couldn't find the actual project codename -
2023-06-21 at 4:05 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseband_processor
the baseband processor typically remains in low-power mode even if the phone is switched off, and the code/instruction set for all of them seems to be proprietary so it's very difficult to tell what they can actually do or how they can be triggered remotely.
starting around 20 years ago the NSA has reportedly used a method called 'The Find' to activate powered-down phones in Iraq and Afghanistan, likely how OP described it - flying a plane overhead and spamming a radio signal that forces phones to respond or register to a tower, regardless of whether they're powered on or not.
Snowden talked about that method being refined and used elsewhere but I couldn't find the actual project codename
Even if that's true it's quite a bit different from reading the contents of a sim card. -
2023-06-21 at 4:19 PM UTCno I don't think I'll be playing your change-the-subject game again
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2023-06-21 at 4:23 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra no I don't think I'll be playing your change-the-subject game again
Irony...
Originally posted by Cowboy2013 So if you have a cell phone in airplane mode or turned off could they have an airplane or something fly over and send out some kind of pulse so it could be detected and read/located?
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2023-06-22 at 12:18 AM UTCCould they ever power them on from a distance?
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2023-06-22 at 12:36 AM UTCAcoustic air gap networking is totally possible, even if the device is powered off and has no battery in it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BadBIOS