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On Fri, 18 May 2007 08:41:20 -0400, "Mindraker" wrote:
"zorba" wrote in message roups.com... Abilene Reporter News Abilene police and fire departments recently ditched an 18-year-old dispatch system for a new $14 million system that has better encryption capabilities and keeps many of the conversations people using police scanners are accustomed to hearing off the air. Police and fire officials began using the new system this month. Copyright 2007, Abilene Reporter News. All Rights Reserved. If the police can encrypt, then private citizens should be able to encrypt with HAM radio, too. Oh? Oh? Don't like that, police? Then don't encrypt your radio. There is something called "public records". the times have changed and so have requirements for public service radio systems. the FBI now requires ALL local police agencies that use NCIC ( all police departments nowadays ) to have their MDT style systems encrypted. it's not optional , it's federal law. homeland defense wants ALL police agency radios to be compatible with their own encrypted national radio systems , in all departments nationwide. it's not law yet, but it's in the works. they strongly feel that local police should be encrypted to keep terrorists from eavesdropping. their work is compromised if a local unencrypted police department is revealing all their activities in an coordinated emergency response event. ( that's their excuse anyway ) my local police departments have used 150mhz and 450 mhz repeaters ( not trunked ) for a couple of decades. ALL local police departments are deep into the process of switching to their already up and running city wide wifi network for BOTH mdt data AND voice. there is NO way to eavesdrop on encrypted wifi at the present time. get used to it ..... change happens all the time and this is a strong era of change for the scanning hobbyist. you will have to learn to adapt to the change or just plain give up the hobby ( or what's left of it ) ........ no one in the federal government and especially local police departments cares if you think you have rights to listen in on them or not. they never liked it in the old days and they are gleeful that the time is coming that no one will be able to eavesdrop. more and more, the police think it's them ( the boys in blue ) against all the rest of us. citizens shouldn't be allowed to own guns and citizens shouldn't be privileged to the inner workings of police activities out in the streets. it's all for their own safety and protection . I love scanning, but tell you the truth , they are probably right .......... k |
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