1994-06-23 - Re: Cellular Telephone Experimenter’s Kit (2600 article)

Header Data

From: Phil Karn <karn@qualcomm.com>
To: pcw@access.digex.net
Message Hash: 6051a2c06759a7304c73b22663371adc38e6c8e16d1d7b4fd3ddb1d4634314ad
Message ID: <199406232328.QAA16686@servo.qualcomm.com>
Reply To: <199406222258.AA16755@access2.digex.net>
UTC Datetime: 1994-06-23 23:33:11 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 23 Jun 94 16:33:11 PDT

Raw message

From: Phil Karn <karn@qualcomm.com>
Date: Thu, 23 Jun 94 16:33:11 PDT
To: pcw@access.digex.net
Subject: Re: Cellular Telephone Experimenter's Kit (2600 article)
In-Reply-To: <199406222258.AA16755@access2.digex.net>
Message-ID: <199406232328.QAA16686@servo.qualcomm.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>This CTEK sounds like a fun toy and I guess I'm glad that it can't be
>used for cellular phone fraud. That would be an illegitimate use. But,
>monitoring cell phone traffic is a crime now, right? Is there a legitimate
>use for the device? Can anyone think of one? 

Several companies make cellular test sets (or optional modules for
more general purpose RF test sets) that perform functions very much
like those of the CTEK package. Since we manufacture cell phones, we
have a perfectly legitimate reason to have a few of those test sets
around here.  And I know of no special licensing requirements to buy
them (other than having $20,000 or so in cash).

Phil





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