← Back to context Comment by KETpXDDzR 4 years ago I see a market for personal WiFi jamming devices. 3 comments KETpXDDzR Reply elric 4 years ago Those are illegal (at least in the US, and likely just about everywhere). Which is bitterly ironic in this case ... spying on people inside their homes using WiFi is "fine", but trying to jam that bullshit is ... illegal. jk7tarYZAQNpTQa 4 years ago Illegal? Why? I'm only heavily using all the WiFi channels with my perfectly legitimate web browsing. ortusdux 4 years ago Jamming would run afoul of the FCC. Now having one or more WAPs randomly modulate their signal strength should do the trick
elric 4 years ago Those are illegal (at least in the US, and likely just about everywhere). Which is bitterly ironic in this case ... spying on people inside their homes using WiFi is "fine", but trying to jam that bullshit is ... illegal. jk7tarYZAQNpTQa 4 years ago Illegal? Why? I'm only heavily using all the WiFi channels with my perfectly legitimate web browsing.
jk7tarYZAQNpTQa 4 years ago Illegal? Why? I'm only heavily using all the WiFi channels with my perfectly legitimate web browsing.
ortusdux 4 years ago Jamming would run afoul of the FCC. Now having one or more WAPs randomly modulate their signal strength should do the trick
Those are illegal (at least in the US, and likely just about everywhere). Which is bitterly ironic in this case ... spying on people inside their homes using WiFi is "fine", but trying to jam that bullshit is ... illegal.
Illegal? Why? I'm only heavily using all the WiFi channels with my perfectly legitimate web browsing.
Jamming would run afoul of the FCC. Now having one or more WAPs randomly modulate their signal strength should do the trick