http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599201315000
Short, interesting read. Granted, it's the 9th circuit court's ruling, but still.
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
I wonder what they would say about my right to destroy my own property as long as I'm not committing fraud, etc.Fangs wrote:"The Government's New Right to Track Your Every Move With GPS"
http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599201315000
Short, interesting read. Granted, it's the 9th circuit court's ruling, but still.
I wonder how easy it would be to detect that you had one of those. Depending on how good the device was hidden, it might take some fairly sophisticated electronics to know that it is there. My guess is that many new GM products already have them and that it would not even require the Government to do anything but tap into that signal. After all, the air waves are "public."jimlongley wrote: I wonder what they would say about my right to destroy my own property as long as I'm not committing fraud, etc.
If the GPS device is attached to my property, my vehicle, on my property, my driveway, and it doesn't have any identifying marks, it seems to me that I could remove it, just like I might remove some other part of the car, and throw it away. How am I supposed to know it's supposed to be there legally?
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202442083077" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;chasfm11 wrote:jimlongley wrote: After all, the air waves are "public."
With some of my ham equipment I could find it in seconds, and may just start scanning my vehicles routinely.chasfm11 wrote:I wonder how easy it would be to detect that you had one of those. Depending on how good the device was hidden, it might take some fairly sophisticated electronics to know that it is there. My guess is that many new GM products already have them and that it would not even require the Government to do anything but tap into that signal. After all, the air waves are "public."jimlongley wrote: I wonder what they would say about my right to destroy my own property as long as I'm not committing fraud, etc.
If the GPS device is attached to my property, my vehicle, on my property, my driveway, and it doesn't have any identifying marks, it seems to me that I could remove it, just like I might remove some other part of the car, and throw it away. How am I supposed to know it's supposed to be there legally?
You also know that as a ham you could "blanket" the GPS receiver using a couple of high power microwave transcievers in close proximity. All perfectly legal. However, I still like the idea of finding the device, removing it, and attaching it to a trash truck. Maybe even some philandering judge?With some of my ham equipment I could find it in seconds, and may just start scanning my vehicles routinely.
Broadcasting a signal with the intent to block another ssignal is illegal. Now if I happened to be running a microwave intrusion detection system about my home and their receiver got swamped by my legal limit system, it might be another matter, but the main GPS frequency is not one that I am licensed to transmit on.PeteCamp wrote:You also know that as a ham you could "blanket" the GPS receiver using a couple of high power microwave transcievers in close proximity. All perfectly legal. However, I still like the idea of finding the device, removing it, and attaching it to a trash truck. Maybe even some philandering judge?With some of my ham equipment I could find it in seconds, and may just start scanning my vehicles routinely.
Except, they are likely some of the class elite that have gates around their property, thus making their driveway off-limits. Interesting how that works, isn't it?Tamie wrote:If someone puts GPS trackers on the personal vehicles of those judges, that's legal too.
Charles L. Cotton wrote:Thanks for posting this!! Now I can go back to disagreeing with the 9th Circuit Court.
Chas.