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In article , John wrote:
Actually, Title 47, Part 15, specifically allows unlicensed intentional emissions. For example, in the AM broadcast band: #snip# This is only an example. Most of the spectrum is available for unlicensed operation at low power, with some frequencies having higher emission limits than others. Therefore, intentional unlicensed emissions are allowed by US regulations. Read Part 15. True. However, Part 15 also states: (b) Operation of an intentional, unintentional, or incidental radiator is subject to the conditions that no harmful interference is caused and that interference must be accepted that may be caused by the operation of an authorized radio station, by another intentional or unintentional radiator, by industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) equipment, or by an incidental radiator. (c) The operator of a radio frequency device shall be required to cease operating the device upon notification by a Commission representative that the device is causing harmful interference. Operation shall not resume until the condition causing the harmful interference has been corrected. It seems to me that the "no harmful interference" clause would put cellphone jammers outside the bounds of operation under Part 15. As far as cellphone use on private property goes... it's certainly within a property owner's right to declare, and enforce a "no cellphone use" policy on that property. I cheer every time I see such a notice. It's also almost certainly within a property owner's right to include some sort of perimeter/periphery shielding (passive, nonradiating interference) to block cellphone signals from entering the property. It's questionable, to me, whether the property owner would be able to get away with using an active interferer, such as a jamming transmitter. The user _might_ win in court, if it could be shown that the jamming signal was strictly limited to the private property in question. However, if enough of the jamming signal left the area to [1] violate the radiated-power limits in Part 15, or [2] result in any interference with cellphone use as little as a foot outside the property line, the property owner would probably lose (IMO). To keep the jamming signal strictly within the property lines, you'd probably have to Faraday-shield the whole building... at which point you probably wouldn't need the jamming transmitter. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
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