this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2021
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Privacy
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There are Google Analytics trackers on The Intercept website, so here is an excerpt:
Source: https: / / theintercept(dot)com/surveillance-catalogue/stingray-iii/
“Ensnares bystanders, drains batteries, blocks calls”
Review by Nathan Wessler
Staff Attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project
This dragnet surveillance workhorse has been deployed for years by numerous local law enforcement agencies across the United States. Don’t worry about the six-figure price tag: A federal grant will cover that. Upside: fierce name. Downsides: ensnares bystanders’ phones within up to 200 meters, drains phones’ batteries by forcing them to broadcast at full power for greater surveillance potential, and can block calls placed by nearby phones. But don’t worry too much: Ready-made non-disclosure agreements from the FBI and Harris Corp. will provide a pretext for concealing these features from the public. If you like the Stingray, you’ll love Harris Corp.’s next-generation Hailstorm, a must-have for cracking the 4G LTE network.
Stingray I/II
Ground Based Geo-Location (Vehicular)
Capabilities
Limitations and Planning Factors
Vendor
Harris Corporation Melbourne, Florida-based Harris Corp. makes the most well-known cell-site simulator technology, the Stingray, used in cellphone surveillance by military intelligence and law enforcement. The company’s May 2015 acquisition of Virginia-based Exelis moved it toward domestic government business, according to industry experts. — Margot Williams, The Intercept
Protocols
900Mhz, 1800Mhz, 850Mhz and 1900Mhz and CDMA (multi-protocol and requires antenna)
Approval
Title 10
Cost: $134,952.00 USD