rated:
posted: Oct. 11, 2008 @ 12:45p
drodgeNo, I'm not a lawyer. But I am an RF expert said:]]]]] who works for NSA and has 15 years of experience working with FCC compliance and I can assure you that despite not being lawyers, the posters here are 100% correct. All cell phones in the US work in licensed bands, and even possessing a device that can jam those frequencies is a felony. So is importing one, or using one.
Furthermore, this piece of crap has been posted here many times in the past. It didn't work then, and it doesn't work now. It's designed for foreign CDMA signals, which by definition are even harder to jam than our GSM networks. It also has a pathetic transmitter that won't work more than a few feet from a receiver. If you want to commit a felony in the process of flushing $47 down the toilet, go ahead. There are sites that claim you can mod this to jam US phones, but anyone who has those skills could build a better one on their own cheaper.
A $30 one from DealExtreme can block out the signal of AT&T 850/1900 GSM/3G and Verizon CDMA within about 10 feet for sure which I had hand-on experience with. So, if you don't have any hand-on experience with this devices, don't make your claim.
As a mobile software developer, it is a super-valuable tool for cell phone testing as many certifications require proper handling in losing and regaining signal. Rather than building a room to shield out the signal which a large company did where I had worked for (not counting travelling from other buildings to there, jammed with testers in a tiny room, signal is back and ruin the testing when someone opens the door...), it is much affordable for smaller developers. A few feet of range is perfect for this purpose.
Message edited by: mcdull on 2008-10-11 12:54:00 CDT