• Re: With Exploding Pager Terrorist Attacks, Israel and the US Have Perm

    From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to Alan Browne on Sun Sep 22 21:15:35 2024
    XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, comp.misc, misc.news.internet.discuss

    On 2024-09-22 20:25, Alan Browne wrote:
    On 2024-09-21 23:59, Here is the News wrote:
    https://dailystormer.in/with-exploding-pager-terrorist-attacks-israel-and-the-us-have-permanently-altered-the-global-security-landscape/

    With Exploding Pager Terrorist Attacks, Israel and the US Have
    Permanently
    Altered the Global Security Landscape

    Silly blather.


    Israel have pulled a similar stunt in the past.  Remotely caused a cell phone to "be faulty".  When it was sent in for repair, the Israeli's
    "fixed" it with explosives in the earpiece area.

    Returned to client.

    Called him up.

    "Hello?"
    "Is this Amir?"
    "Yes, who is ...."

    Remote detonation with special tone codes ...

    This is a degree more.

    Nobody is going to trust when buying electronics from a foreigner
    manufacturer that it is safe.

    If I buy a Lenovo computer from China, or a Motorola phone, (both things
    I actually did) how safe am I that it will not explode and kill me,
    because I have said in X that communists are dirty rats (which I haven't
    said, it is just an example)?

    Nobody is safe anymore.

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Blueshirt@21:1/5 to Steve Hayes on Mon Sep 23 14:09:27 2024
    XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, misc.news.internet.discuss

    Steve Hayes wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Sep 2024 14:25:46 -0400, Alan Browne
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    Israel have pulled a similar stunt in the past. Remotely
    caused a cell phone to "be faulty". When it was sent in for
    repair, the Israeli's "fixed" it with explosives in the
    earpiece area.

    As have many others.

    Many have booby-trapped a single device, or even a batch of a
    dozen or so. But doing it to several thousand at once is a
    game changer.

    To do this type of thing an industrial scale is very clever and
    shows that no technology is safe for the nefarious types... the
    Hezbollah's of this world will have to start training Pigeons or
    something for their communications...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From D@21:1/5 to Blueshirt on Mon Sep 23 19:16:50 2024
    XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, misc.news.internet.discuss

    On Mon, 23 Sep 2024, Blueshirt wrote:

    Steve Hayes wrote:

    On Sun, 22 Sep 2024 14:25:46 -0400, Alan Browne
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    Israel have pulled a similar stunt in the past. Remotely
    caused a cell phone to "be faulty". When it was sent in for
    repair, the Israeli's "fixed" it with explosives in the
    earpiece area.

    As have many others.

    Many have booby-trapped a single device, or even a batch of a
    dozen or so. But doing it to several thousand at once is a
    game changer.

    To do this type of thing an industrial scale is very clever and
    shows that no technology is safe for the nefarious types... the
    Hezbollah's of this world will have to start training Pigeons or
    something for their communications...


    I wonder what's next for them? Lora radios and raspberry pies? Smoke
    signals or flashlights/laser + morse code?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Martin =?UTF-8?Q?=CE=A4rautmann?=@21:1/5 to Blueshirt on Thu Sep 26 09:28:06 2024
    XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, misc.news.internet.discuss

    On Mon, 23 Sep 2024 14:09:27 +0100, Blueshirt wrote:
    To do this type of thing an industrial scale is very clever and
    shows that no technology is safe for the nefarious types... the
    Hezbollah's of this world will have to start training Pigeons or
    something for their communications...

    Still no problem - just add a trace of plutonium to the messages.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)