----- Begin Included Message -----
It is speculated that poorly protected systems can be effectively monitored up to the order of one kilometer from the target equipment.
----- End Included Message -----
The "readability" of the relatively high energy sweeps in a standard CRT monitor is well known. Any idea of similar effects on LCD screens ? The energy involved would be orders of magnitude less, just for starters. Also, since the whole screen is effectively oscillating, I'm not sure that there is any 'raster' sweep per se going on here at all. This could be a factor for the truly paranoid :-) using portables with LCD screens.
Pete Carpenter pete@cirrus.com
I've been told that the CRT is not what is generating the signals at all, rather that it is the CPU, and that having an LCD screen won't save you, strength of signal reduced or otherwise.
Possessed by The Unholy, ghoast@gnu.ai.mit.edu scrawled the following in blood:
I've been told that the CRT is not what is generating the signals at all, rather that it is the CPU, and that having an LCD screen won't save you, strength of signal reduced or otherwise.
Actually, it's almost entirely the cables, and somewhat the screen (CRT, that is). A shielded CPU box isn't going to be giving off really any appreciable amount of RF waves, certainly not enough to read coherently. An LCD will help, since they don't emit the same kind of signals (no CRT), and no cables going to them. +- eggo@titan.ucs.umass.edu --><-- Eat Some Paste -+ +- Yorn desh born, der ritt de gitt der gue, -+ +- Orn desh, dee born desh, de umn bork! bork! bork! -+ +----------------- The Durex Blender Corporation -----------------+
participants (2)
-
ghoast@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
Round Waffle