It's not entirely true that only law enforcement may monitor cellular communications. Here is a device that will warn users that they have a cell phone on, but will not enable one to listen to the conversation. The primary use is as stated in the ad, environments with sensitive equipment which may not react well to cellular communications. This will also sense phones that are not in use but turned on. http://www.emctest.com/Holaday/product2.asp?ProductID=19&ProductType=Special ty -----Original Message----- From: Rob Shein [mailto:shotenat_private] Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2002 4:57 PM To: 'Bartholomew Simpson'; vuln-devat_private Subject: RE: TOTAL WIRELESS SECURITY Depends...if these areas are small and surrounded by places where cell phones/pagers/etc flourish, there's just about no way. You're also going to have a problem with cellular detection in that only law enforcement is allowed to have devices that scan on those frequencies. A better bet might merely be jamming them all, but that is also illegal under FCC regulations. > -----Original Message----- > From: Bartholomew Simpson [mailto:focusyneat_private] > Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2002 3:29 PM > To: vuln-devat_private > Subject: TOTAL WIRELESS SECURITY > > > Greetings! > > I have several areas were no wireless communications > are allowed cell phones, wireless PDAs, text pagers, > 802.11x, etc. I frequently monitor these areas using > NetStumbler but that will only catch 802.11x traffic. > How do I detect the rest of the wireless traffic? > Thanks! > > BS > > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > HotJobs - Search new jobs daily now > http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/ >
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Dec 05 2002 - 11:15:01 PST