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How mobile phones let spies see our every move ~matrix33~

  Author:  51027  Category:(Conspiracy) Created:(10/22/2002 5:13:00 PM)
This post has been Viewed (2204 times)

How mobile phones let spies see our every move

Government's secret Celldar project will allow surveillance of anyone, at any time and anywhere there is a phone signal

Jason Burke and Peter Warren Sunday October 13, 2002 The Observer

Secret radar technology research that will allow the biggest-ever extension of 'Big Brother'-style surveillance in the UK is being funded by the Government. The radical new system, which has outraged civil liberties groups, uses mobile phone masts to allow security authorities to watch vehicles and individuals 'in real time' almost anywhere in Britain.

The technology 'sees' the shapes made when radio waves emitted by mobile phone masts meet an obstruction. Signals bounced back by immobile objects, such as walls or trees, are filtered out by the receiver. This allows anything moving, such as cars or people, to be tracked. Previously, radar needed massive fixed equipment to work and transmissions from mobile phone masts were thought too weak to be useful.

The system works wherever a mobile phone can pick up a signal. By using receivers attached to mobile phone masts, users of the new technology could focus in on areas hundreds of miles away and bring up a display showing any moving vehicles and people.

An individual with one type of receiver, a portable unit little bigger than a laptop computer, could even use it as a 'personal radar' covering the area around the user. Researchers are working to give the new equipment 'X-ray vision' - the capability to 'see' through walls and look into people's homes.

Ministry of Defence officials are hoping to introduce the system as soon as resources allow. Police and security services are known to be interested in a variety of possible surveillance applications. The researchers themselves say the system, known as Celldar, is aimed at anti-terrorism defence, security and road traffic management.

However civil liberties groups have been swift to condemn the plan.

'It's an appalling idea,' said Simon Davies, director of Privacy International. 'The Government is just capitalising on current public fears over security to intoduce new systems that are neither desirable nor necessary.'

The system, used alongside technology which allows individuals to be identified by their mobile phone handsets, will mewan that individuals can be located and their movements watched on a screen from hundreds of miles away.

Prototypes have been effective over 50 to 100 metres but the developers are confident that range can be extended.

After a series of meetings with Roke Manor, a private research company in Romsey, Hants, MoD officials have started funding the multi-million pound project. Reports of the meetings are 'classified'.

Whitehall officials involved in radar confirmed that the MoD was 'very interested' last week. 'It's all about resources now,' said one.

Private security specialists have also welcomed the new technology.

'It will be enormously useful,' the director of one private security firm said. 'Instead of setting up expensive and cumbersome surveillance equipment, police or the security services could start work quickly and easily almost anywhere.

'For tracking a suspect, preventing a potential crime or a terrorist strike or simply locating people [the system] has enormous advantages.'

It is likely that the technology would be used at first to protect sensitive installations such as ports and airfields.

The perimeter of a nuclear power station or an RAF base could be watched without having a bank of CCTV screens and dozens of expensive cameras.

If the radar picked up movement then a single camera could be focused on a specific area.

Celldar could also monitor roads when poor visibility due to bad weather rendered cameras useless.

'The equipment could pick up traffic flows towards an accident site and the details of a crash; who is where and so on,' said Peter Lloyd of Roke Manor.

Lloyd also outlined a number of military applications for the technology. Individual armoured vehicles or even soldiers could carry the detectors which could tell them where enemy troops were.

Security specialists point out how useful personal radars would be in siege situations. However there are significant concerns that the technology might be abused by authorities or fall into the wrong hands.

'Like all instrusive surveillance, we need to be sure that it is properly regulated, preferably by the judiciary,' said Roger Bingham of Liberty.

Bingham expressed concerns that the new equipment, which would be virtually undetectable, could be used by private detectives or others for personal or commercial gain.

Modern technology has brought massive opportunities for wider surveillance. Since the 11 September terrorist attacks on Washington and New York, the government has been pushing through a package of anti-terrorism legislation which targets electronic communications.

Senior police officers are now allowed to access mobile telephone and email records without judicial or executive assent. Within two years, all mobile phones are expected to have satellite-locating devices built into them.

How it changed my life:

just something to think about

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Date: 10/22/2002 7:39:00 PM  From Authorid: 21867    This technique used to be called 'fuzz bounce'...and has been looked at for sometime...in fact I first read/heard about it approx 3 years ago. It utilises the same precepts mentioned here...receiving of reflected transmissions like Radar to create an image...a similar type of monitoring was investigated in the early 1980s utilising reflected radiation from TV monitors...though that proved to only provide minimal success and certainly only with a range of approx a metre of the monitor. Anyway...last I heard about this survelliance technique was that it was still inaccurate to provide any real survelliance benefit, given that at the most it can only provide a 'probable indication' that a object in motion is in a specific area. They are still limited by a 'clear line of sight' method of imaging...as such require numerous cellphone nodes in many different locations to corelate all the reflected imagery and create some form of 3D image. Removing known STATIC images, such as buildings etc is indeed possible...yet the very reflections used to track the MOVING objects are also bouncing in turn off static objects such as buildings. As for specific survelliance of electronic communication...well, Carnivore did it...Eshcelon is doing it...nothing new there. The moves to chip all cellphones however is something you should be very keen on watching closely - for there is NO justifiable need to install tracking systems on a cellphone. The excuses/justfications so far have been that criminals and terrorists have peferred to utilise pre-paid, non-contracted cellphones to organise their business/attacks...and a tracking chip would help locate them. Too bad if you are the 99.9999% of the REST of the cellphone owning population and DON'T utilise your cellphone for crime...it really doesn't seem to matter. But hey...its all just crazy comspiracist theory again...strange how these past theories/warnings are now making the news as 'new inventions' and 'new methods for combatting crime and terrorism'. Peace,  
Date: 10/22/2002 7:41:00 PM  From Authorid: 54987    Well they'll just get boring conversations from me. LOL. From what I've experienced of cellphones they couldn't use them here... a lot of places there is no signal. The UK would be easy to do that because of the size of the country.  
Date: 10/22/2002 7:45:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 51027    hey agent smith man yeah i heard of this i think last year but then i forgot all about it lol and i was on a site a little while ago and i saw it and i was like oh yeah i forgot about that lol  
Date: 10/22/2002 7:47:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 51027    lol koolade yeah they will be getting boring conversations from me too lol or will they *looks around room and flys away* lol  
Date: 10/24/2002 1:59:00 AM  From Authorid: 42259    Hmm.If I ever plan a hiest I'l make sure not to use my cell phone!  
Date: 10/24/2002 10:20:00 AM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 51027    lol pd now your thinking lol thanks for replying   
Date: 11/11/2002 4:37:00 PM  From Authorid: 60434    It's not funny ,just wait.
Date: 11/11/2002 5:37:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 51027    thanks no fool123 its no lauging matter lol j/k  

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