Which wouldn’t prevent a denial of service attack by flooding the frequency with whote noise as the post suggests
That being said, I don’t think it’s a good idea. Police aren’t ICE, and in many cases police are the only ones that have been able to stop ICE from escalating further
And, if all the actions listed in the OP, it’s the only one that’s illegal. It has always been illegal to broadcast in regulated frequencies since licensure became a thing.
It can make it more difficult and time consuming to locate them all. But it’s still easy to find single broadcasters. I think moving them constantly would be more likely to succeed.
Most police departments are using encrypted signals now so you can’t listen to their radio.
Which wouldn’t prevent a denial of service attack by flooding the frequency with whote noise as the post suggests
That being said, I don’t think it’s a good idea. Police aren’t ICE, and in many cases police are the only ones that have been able to stop ICE from escalating further
Also. If you’re broadcasting (white noise) they can track your broadcast location fairly easily
And, if all the actions listed in the OP, it’s the only one that’s illegal. It has always been illegal to broadcast in regulated frequencies since licensure became a thing.
Was gonna say. Although i used to marine radio that let me talk on their frequencies.
Does this change if you have multiple radios on at a time?
It can make it more difficult and time consuming to locate them all. But it’s still easy to find single broadcasters. I think moving them constantly would be more likely to succeed.
Also, scanners don’t “send as well as receive.”
Damn. My local PD and our state police and Fire/ ems all livestream their live scanners from the web, incase someone doesnt have a scanner.