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  1. Hattie Cat (hattiecat@shitposter.club)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Apr-2018 07:03:56 EDT Hattie Cat Hattie Cat
    Superb. A dirt-cheap software-defined radio with transmit capability. (Salivates wildly.) https://hackaday.com/2018/04/23/spoofing-cell-networks-with-a-usb-to-vga-adapter/
    In conversation Tuesday, 24-Apr-2018 07:03:56 EDT from shitposter.club permalink

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      Spoofing Cell Networks with a USB to VGA Adapter
      By Tom Nardi from Hackaday

      RTL-SDR brought cheap and ubiquitous Software Defined Radio (SDR) to the masses, opening up whole swaths of the RF spectrum which were simply unavailable to the average hacker previously. Because the RTL-SDR supported devices were designed as TV tuners, they had no capability to transmit. For the price they are still an absolutely fantastic deal, and deserve to be in any modern hacker’s toolkit, but sometimes you want to reach out and touch someone.

      GSM network broadcast from a VGA adapter

      Now you can. At OsmoDevCon [Steve Markgraf] released osmo-fl2k, a tool which allows transmit-only SDR through cheap USB 3.0 to VGA adapters based on the Fresco Logic FL2000 chip. Available through the usual overseas suppliers for as little has $5 USD, these devices can be used unmodified to transmit low-power FM, DAB, DVB-T, GSM, UMTS and GPS signals.

      In a demonstration on the project page, one of these USB VGA adapters is used to broadcast a GSM cellular network which is picked up by the adjacent cell phones. Another example shows how it can be used to broadcast FM radio. A GitHub repository has been set up which includes more examples. The signals transmitted from the FL2000 chip are obviously quite weak, but the next step will logically be the hardware modifications necessary to boost transmission to more useful levels.

      To say this is a big deal is something of an understatement. For a few bucks, you’ll be able to get a device to spoof cellular networks and GPS signals. This was possible before, of course, but took SDR hardware that was generally outside the budget of the casual experimenter. If you bought a HackRF or an Ettus Research rig, you were probably responsible enough not to get into trouble with it, but that’s not necessarily the case anymore. As exciting as this technology is, we would be wise to approach it with caution. In an increasingly automated world, GPS spoofing can have some pretty bad results.

    1. Mister M. T. Sack (thatbrickster@shitposter.club)'s status on Tuesday, 24-Apr-2018 07:05:49 EDT Mister M. T. Sack Mister M. T. Sack
      in reply to
      @hattiecat Good way to discourage people from thinking phone calls and texts are 'secure' and that they can be tracked at things like protests, etc.
      In conversation Tuesday, 24-Apr-2018 07:05:49 EDT from shitposter.club permalink
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