What slightly different meaning of mobile phone are hitting? How can it be detected?
1 thought on “ Various Ways Of Mobile Phone Tapping”
With modern technology as it is today…you will never know your line is tapped!
The spy shows you see are sensationalized!
Best wishes!
It’s a radio signal, digital or an FM radio frequency. You will never know. A radio station cannot tell who is listening to their station, it’s a bout the same thing except intercepting a phone signal is illegal.
The Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment (Stored Communications) Act 2004 introduced into the Act the concept of a ‘stored communication’ (paragraph 7(3A)) and provided that a stored communication could be intercepted without the need for a telecommunications interception warrant (paragraph 7(2)(ad)).(2) Access to such communications could therefore be obtained by other lawful means, such as by a normal search warrant.
A ‘stored communication’ broadly defined includes electronic messages located on a computer, internet server or other equipment, whether read or unread, such as emails, text messages and voicemail. Subsection 7(1) of the Act prohibits interception of communications ‘passing over’ a telecommunications system. The confusion that arose was that in certain situations emails, text messages, voice mail etc can be deemed to be no longer ‘passing over’ any such system.
With modern technology as it is today…you will never know your line is tapped!
The spy shows you see are sensationalized!
Best wishes!
It’s a radio signal, digital or an FM radio frequency. You will never know. A radio station cannot tell who is listening to their station, it’s a bout the same thing except intercepting a phone signal is illegal.
The Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment (Stored Communications) Act 2004 introduced into the Act the concept of a ‘stored communication’ (paragraph 7(3A)) and provided that a stored communication could be intercepted without the need for a telecommunications interception warrant (paragraph 7(2)(ad)).(2) Access to such communications could therefore be obtained by other lawful means, such as by a normal search warrant.
A ‘stored communication’ broadly defined includes electronic messages located on a computer, internet server or other equipment, whether read or unread, such as emails, text messages and voicemail. Subsection 7(1) of the Act prohibits interception of communications ‘passing over’ a telecommunications system. The confusion that arose was that in certain situations emails, text messages, voice mail etc can be deemed to be no longer ‘passing over’ any such system.
They can acces anything they want..