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Universal Radio Grabber: the USRP

Nethemas the Great writes "The Universal Software Radio Peripheral or USRP created by Matt Ettus and Eric Blossom gives a new perspective on the radio spectrum, as in just about all of it from DC to 2.9Ghz. With the right software and daughterboards, their USRPs can capture FM, read GPS, decode HDTV, transmit over emergency bands, track peoples movement via their mobile phones, and much, much more. With prices starting at just $550 this new toy is accessible by most anyone."

2 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. The real question by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real question: how long before it becomes illegal to own or use one?

    1. Re:The real question by egomaniac · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It makes much less sense to license receivers. The radiation is there, passing through people, even. Frankly, I don't understand why anyone would think that I don't have the right to intercept any signal which passes through my personal space and process it however i please.

      So it should be legal for me to use a night-vision scope to look into my neighbor's bedroom window at night? After all, her naked body is reflecting electromagnetic radiation into my personal space. Amplifying it into a visible image, digitizing it, and making it available on the Internet seems like a perfectly logical step, doesn't it?

      People have an expectation of privacy. They expect you won't be sneaking around peering into their windows at night, and they expect you won't be intercepting and decoding their personal telephone calls. Yes, you have the right to decode electromagnetic radiation. And yes, the callers have a right to privacy. Any time two different rights conflict, one or the other has to take precedence. Privacy is a much more desirable-to-society right than is the ability to spy on our neighbors, and so privacy wins.

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