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- Apr 22, 2022
Jump back to here.So how do I browse the kiwi farms using personal radio hardware?
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Jump back to here.So how do I browse the kiwi farms using personal radio hardware?
My local repeater is slowly turning into 7200.The 5 most disliked Amateur Operators on 7200 have been called:
















14.313, though less active in recent years as 7200Are there any other nets as exciting as 7200?
One way to avoid this is to call it scrambling - pick some common, fast and modern encryption algorithm and some trivial, public key like all-zeros. Then when you really want to encrypt it, use a random key (at that point you are under FCC reg's, but who cares). You can use the standard key exchange protocols over the plain-text (scrambled) link to define some standard (but not assosciated with the original protocol) way to do the key exchange, like in SSL.I'm also looking into ways to get encryption without calling it encryption since the FCC Title 47 § 97.113(a)(4) prohibits the use of it, and since I want widespread use I need to find a workaround or some some rule that makes it exempt from the FCC regulations.
An issue is it says we’re forbidden to transmit “messages encoded for the purpose of obscuring their meaning” not specifically “encryption”, so “scrambling” is obscuring etc etc. packet can be sent in clear so in the unlikely event of prosecution you'd have to explain why you are using a cypher, as it serves no purpose other than obscuring a message, publishing a key in a public place likely wouldn’t cut it. A really broad interpretation could be talking in clear voice but in a secret code known only unto the speakers also being verboten.One way to avoid this is to call it scrambling - pick some common, fast and modern encryption algorithm and some trivial, public key like all-zeros. Then when you really want to encrypt it, use a random key (at that point you are under FCC reg's, but who cares). You can use the standard key exchange protocols over the plain-text (scrambled) link to define some standard (but not assosciated with the original protocol) way to do the key exchange, like in SSL.
Just to remind you that this sounds like a mesh network, and with no hierarchical control it behaves like an ALOHA style net, so while the theoretical link speed is in the 30's of mbps, once you start hitting some link saturation the collisions rapidly decrease the real transfer speed. Wikipedia has a whole page about ALOHA networks and the design considerations for maximum transfer speeds.
law in the United States is established by precedent,An issue is it says we’re forbidden to transmit “messages encoded for the purpose of obscuring their meaning” not specifically “encryption”, so “scrambling” is obscuring etc etc. packet can be sent in clear so in the unlikely event of prosecution you'd have to explain why you are using a cypher, as it serves no purpose other than obscuring a message, publishing a key in a public place likely wouldn’t cut it. A really broad interpretation could be talking in clear voice but in a secret code known only unto the speakers also being verboten.
The only exemptions off the top of my head are sat telecommand and repeater controls etc.
This has come up a lot over the years. You have to explain this to the judge, not convince other hams at the end of the day.
It would be funny if a farmer ends up setting the precedent, I always had a hunch the mesh and feng brigade might be the straw that breaks the camels back, we’ll see.law in the United States is established by precedent,
zero FCC enforcement actions exist for 47 CFR Part 97. All FCC enforcement actions governing the Ham radio spectrum are publicly available here. digital voice modes like C4FM (Yaesu Fusion) which are proprietary, commercial, and patented could be argued that they fall under the "no obscuring message" rule. they can't be received by the general public and can only be decoded with other C4FM radios.
also there are people who scream the nigger word everyday on 7200 WITH their real government issued callsign and literally nothing happens.
The FCC rules governing "encryption" on the Ham radio bands were drafted during a time before the Internet and are a relic of the Cold War era.
btw did you know torrenting movies is illegal? You wouldn't download a car, would you?
please forgive my autistic ramblings, but software encryption itself was considered an armament and subject to export controls the same likes of a guided missile or fighter jet up until Bernstein v United States set the precedent thas source code of software was protected under the 1st AmendmentIt would be funny if a farmer ends up setting the precedent, I always had a hunch the mesh and feng brigade might be the straw that breaks the camels back, we’ll see.


That's not entirely true. Plenty of digital modems include a scrambler or other pseudorandom encoding in order to improve noise rejection and keep decoders from losing sync from a long series of ones or zeroes. The requirement on all of those is that they're documented and the specifications are published before it's used on the air.it serves no purpose other than obscuring a message, publishing a key in a public place likely wouldn’t cut it.
Ah, yes, Mike, probably the gayest Hamtuber. His videos are fun!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLoVnFD71o4 (PreserveTube)
Some mad lad using a shopping cart corrall as an antenna. Cart Narc approved ?
The chainlink fence once is actually really interesting, I'm amazed that the G90s internal tuner can tune it up with no problems