- Joined
- Jun 4, 2017
Considering how lax the FCC has been the past 15 years, you can probably pirate without a ticket and get away with it. That is not legal advice.
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You don't have to worry about the FCC. You have to worry about your local hams playing foxhunting with someone not playing by the rules. Then the FCC comes.Considering how lax the FCC has been the past 15 years, you can probably pirate without a ticket and get away with it. That is not legal advice.
This is literally the best time in at least twenty years to get (back) on HF; setting aside the occasional blackout because of flares, etc. the sun has been going gangbusters during the current solar cycle and 17 Meters and up have had some kind of DX opening almost every day.Great to see a thread on this, thanks @777Flux. I've been out of ham radio for a while, but I have nothing but good memories about it. I bought a new Icom 7300 series transciever a couple of years ago to get back into HF ham radio, but other things got in it's way. It's just sitting on my desk now, connected to a random wire antenna, and I only do listening for now. Both to weird number stations or just trying to pick up European HF stations during nighttime.
Back in the days pre-internet when living in Europe I used to fuck around a lot with packet radio because dialing any other European country was unaffordable, up to 10 current US dollars a minute, to exchange data with other nerds that were into ham radio. Hours long AX.25 sessions over HF, exchanging either Fidomail for local BBS'es or just straight up pirating software over radio. Loved VHF/UHF DX'ing as well, trying to pick up TV stations from far away and seeing the station identifying logo's through a fuckload of noise.
Happy to see what other Kiwi's are up to, this is certainly renewing my interest in this stuff again!
I can confirm that he is quite annoying. Heard him many a time on my drive home from work. First time he complained about “window lickers” I laughed, but it got old quick when I just wanted to trash talk with truckersThere is always some drama in the CB world. They have their own lingo and cows. Lots of retarded youtube "techs" who do nothing but bash each other. The biggest cow now is "Mud Duck In the Desert" aka Fine Tune CB aka Mark Sherman. He jams channel 19 all day obsessing over other youtube "techs" and lives in an RV. He has been location doxxed and chased out of a few trailer parks.
Depends on country. Where I live callsigns and related info are not publicly accessible by default. There are public callbooks but you have to input your info by yourself and it's not mandatory. I got my callisign months ago and there's no info about me anywhere except in the communication agency's archives.To HAM is to self-dox. I've never seen the appeal.
older hams are some of the biggest moralfags and rulefags i have ever met. they get very grumpy if anything remotely interesting like latin american pirate stations interrupt their health issue chat sessionsYou don't have to worry about the FCC. You have to worry about your local hams playing foxhunting with someone not playing by the rules.
older hams are some of the biggest moralfags and rulefags i have ever met. they get very grumpy if anything remotely interesting like latin american pirate stations interrupt their health issue chat sessions
Sounds like some good fun could be had fucking with them in a mobile installolder hams are some of the biggest moralfags and rulefags i have ever met. they get very grumpy if anything remotely interesting like latin american pirate stations interrupt their health issue chat sessions
The best HF SDR I've had experience with so far has been the RSPDuo which is in a similar price point when compared to the AirSPY HF+. It has two independent 50 ohm connections so you can run two different antennas to the receiver. But if you are just getting started with the hobby and don't want to spend more than $30 the RTL-SDR V4 can provide basic HF coverage for most of the bands.Last I tested, KiwiSDR still can't hold itself up against Airspy HF+ in terms of noise rejection, though KiwiSDR is easier to setup if you plan to share your receiver with the Internet.
In a hypothetical scenario yes. The FCC doesn't have the infrastructure in place to take enforcement action against unlicensed operators who aren't engaged in gross misconduct like interfering with public utility . Additionally for rules regarding "encryption", baud limits, out of band operations and power limits it's very difficult to bring the hammer down on someone when there is a lack of any established case law. Many of the rules in Part 97 where from a time where the Internet did not exist.Considering how lax the FCC has been the past 15 years, you can probably pirate without a ticket and get away with it. That is not legal advice.
Building a mobile HF setup that could actually do something is kinda a waste just to be unsociable.Sounds like some good fun could be had fucking with them in a mobile install
I duno there are parts of 40 and 20 meters that sound like /b/.It's almost like the hobby has autism as a prerequisite and autistics like their rules and order.
Thats a constant in ham radio software. Hams tend to be tinkerers who are always jumping from one thing to the next. Everything is always barely documented and 90% done.But the documentation is terrible.
Definitely true. There are a lot of hams who would wring my neck if they knew what I did. All you need to cause chaos is a baofeng, laptop and a good soundcard interface.Sounds like some good fun could be had fucking with them in a mobile install
Down where? FRS on 462Mhz? Any of them should. Also look for the GMRS channels. That become popular around here with the jeeper and prepper types. There are a few repeaters now.I want to try and decode privacy tones on FRS frequencies, I don't know if RTL-SDR will reach down there but it'll be interesting to see what the local airwaves look like.
I hate to be a technical prick, but literally shortwave radio and CB don't need any doxing info. Just FCC HAM.Despite the FCC doxing, getting into shortwave radio and/or CB monitoring would be pretty fun exactly for those shitposting niggertalk conversations.
It probably is but all the weird "Only THESE modes" limits have been bad so this is good.The FCC has drafted a new policy on removing baud limits and digital mode restrictions from the HF bands and replacing it with a 2.8 - 4 kHz bandwidth limitation - which is fairly reasonable
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-397992A1.pdf
This is a step in the right direction, but is probably being done as a result of commercial interests in utilization of the HF bands for transmitting financial data.
It's more because a Congresscritter introduced legislation to force them to revise the rules, and if there's anything the Permanent Bureaucracy doesn't like, it's being told what to do by someone who isn't a swamp creature.The FCC has drafted a new policy on removing baud limits and digital mode restrictions from the HF bands and replacing it with a 2.8 - 4 kHz bandwidth limitation - which is fairly reasonable
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-397992A1.pdf
This is a step in the right direction, but is probably being done as a result of commercial interests in utilization of the HF bands for transmitting financial data.
Representative Lesko had already introduced legislation to essentially force the FCC to address this issue, and she claimed to be ready to do so a second time. FCC Chairperson Jessica Rosenworcel clearly didn’t relish that prospect:
I think we should refresh that record so that we can move ahead and maybe get to this issue before you have to introduce some additional legislation.