The Snowden Interview
The Snowden Interview
Not sure if Snowden is serious, or trolling...
Re: The Snowden Interview
[color=#FFBF00]Physicist [/color][color=#FF4000]of[/color] [color=#0000FF]Q3W[/color]
Re: The Snowden Interview
lol, that gif is awesome. And relevant, considering it just happened. 10/10
Re: The Snowden Interview
Snowden claims an intelligence agency can turn our phones on when we have them off. lol or duh?
Re: The Snowden Interview
of course they can. and webcams, probably
basically, assume anything at your end capable of transmitting information, which is plugged into a network and powered (i.e. is plugged in or has a battery in it), can be used to eavesdrop on you
basically, assume anything at your end capable of transmitting information, which is plugged into a network and powered (i.e. is plugged in or has a battery in it), can be used to eavesdrop on you
Re: The Snowden Interview
I don't doubt that. But I don't understand how a phone that is completely powered down can be powered up remotely. Can anyone explain how this can be done?
Re: The Snowden Interview
Nothing is completely powered down....thats my guess. I mean even when u have your phone off, the led lights up when u are charging it right?. There is active circuitry there. Think about that for a second. Plus ghe power on off button is a soft button...it doesn't mechanically openn or closes any circuitry... it just gives the electronic command
Last edited by Tsakali on Fri May 30, 2014 2:08 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: The Snowden Interview
Sure, when I plug my iPhone in, it shows a charging icon on the screen. But when it's not plugged in, there's nothing.
Nothing is completely powered down? So whose idea is that? Apple? Samsung? Why would they want to keep your phone "accessible" by not having a complete shutdown? Or is that an engineering problem that has no fix?
Nothing is completely powered down? So whose idea is that? Apple? Samsung? Why would they want to keep your phone "accessible" by not having a complete shutdown? Or is that an engineering problem that has no fix?
Re: The Snowden Interview
You think they made it so you can't remove batteries from iPhones just for style? hMMmmMMmm?xer0s wrote:Sure, when I plug my iPhone in, it shows a charging icon on the screen. But when it's not plugged in, there's nothing.
Nothing is completely powered down? So whose idea is that? Apple? Samsung? Why would they want to keep your phone "accessible" by not having a complete shutdown? Or is that an engineering problem that has no fix?
Re: The Snowden Interview
Was it here? Years ago probably. There was a link, when clicked it opened the cd/dvd drawer (remotely) and in my PCxer0s wrote:Snowden claims an intelligence agency can turn our phones on when we have them off. lol or duh?
Scary then and probably now.
[color=#FFBF00]Physicist [/color][color=#FF4000]of[/color] [color=#0000FF]Q3W[/color]
Re: The Snowden Interview
Not necessarily an engineering problem (if it was deemed as a problem they would have solved it), as much as it might be an inherent feature of the way modern devices operate. And no, I highly doubt it was made into a spying machine by design... but it coincidentally may be allowing such back doors to exist.xer0s wrote:Sure, when I plug my iPhone in, it shows a charging icon on the screen. But when it's not plugged in, there's nothing.
Nothing is completely powered down? So whose idea is that? Apple? Samsung? Why would they want to keep your phone "accessible" by not having a complete shutdown? Or is that an engineering problem that has no fix?
Re: The Snowden Interview
For once I agree with you!scared? wrote:Moron...
Re: The Snowden Interview
Even without a battery in the unit, capacitors hold enough charge to power on a transceiver and send small bursts of data. Only way to be safe is to wrap it up in tinfoil so that it can't send a signal.
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