Re: Spread Spectrum Nets (Way to do safely)
Robert Woodhead writes:
Succinctly, use the purloined letter technique -- hide it in plain sight. There are RF bands set aside for unlicensed low-power operation; some new phones use spread-spectrum techniques in these bands.
It's more than just purloined-letter issues - it's *legal*. That means that the FCC won't be triangulating around to find and destroy your transmitters, which is good. So you're back to threats from the CIA/DEA/NSA/FBI, pigeons, vandals, etc., and encryption and spread-spectrum make it a lot easier to avoid problems from frustrated cops.
You write:
Robert Woodhead writes:
Succinctly, use the purloined letter technique -- hide it in plain sight. There are RF bands set aside for unlicensed low-power operation; some new phones use spread-spectrum techniques in these bands.
It's more than just purloined-letter issues - it's *legal*.
You miss the point. The point is, rather than build an underground net, build an overt one that has the features you want, that lots of people would like to use. The classic example of this technique, of course, is the Internet itself. I'm sure there are people who would hold that it has resulted in the dissemination of lots of "classified" cryptographic munitions. Yet you don't see anyone trying to shut it down. Why? Because it is useful and has a large user community of good folks who would get royally p'od at anyone who tried. Same thing with cellular phones. With TV. And on and on.
participants (2)
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Robert J. Woodhead -
wcs@anchor.ho.att.com