In Reply to: Re: anyone have cordless phone frequencies? posted by Marcus Anthony on September 28, 2000 at 23:37:55:
Well, taking into account Federally mandated manditory minimum sentencing guidelines, it would depend on just how much crack you were dealing, I wonder if the same would apply to listening to cellulars, one listen is bad but more than two conversations and your in more trouble..hee heee.....
: : Yikes, you might as well have just said you're a crack dealer.... sheeeesh. It's illegal to listen to cellulars and cordless phones. :o)
: : : hey thanks for your help guys i just listen to it when im tired of listing to whats going on in kitsap county so i dont do it all the time. but u got to admit it is fun. well thanks for your help
: Actually, in a contemporary court of law the sentence for monitoring
: cellular might very well outweigh the sentence for dealing crack.
: Yes, I'm being slightly sarcastic. Having once owned an analog cell phone I was well aware that I was BROADCASTING. Who do you point the
: finger at for breaches in telecommunication privacy? The
: monitoring enthusiast, or the unwilling communications conglomerates?
: Using the RF spectrum for hurtful gain should be illegal, monitoring
: it should not. Meanwhile, the cell companies should be held accountable for issues dealing with privacy. Just a thought.
: -Marcus