OR: Put phone in microwave and set it for a slow-roast program. The interference will prevent harmful spy-rays from reaching the phone.
Bonus, you can fast-charge Apple devices using the Microwave thanks to #AppleWave! On 5 May 2015 12:58:02 GMT+01:00, Georgi Guninski <gunin...@guninski.com> wrote: >On Sun, May 03, 2015 at 08:51:02PM +0000, jim bell wrote: >> >removing the battery may vary among devices. Snowden told people >> >visiting him in Hong Kong to put their phones in the refrigerator, >which >> >is a Faraday cage. Also, using a bag is arguably less hassle than >> >removing the battery. >> For an RF-shield, I think that using a microwave oven would be much >superior to a refrigerator. By definition, a microwave oven is >designed to contain a huge (1 kilowatt) emission of 2.45 GHz signal >(close to those of cell phone frequencies, some are 1700-1900 MHz), so >that humans can live with reasonable safety a foot or so away from it. > This implies a shielding of around 60 decibels.I'd keep a container of >water inside the microwave cavity to absorb emitted microwave-band >signals. (And, of course, you should detach the power-cord of the >microwave, to avoid accidently frying your valuable electronics.)As for >smartphones, my understanding is that most of them don't have >detachable batteries. They do, however, have "airplane-mode" function, >where (presumably) they are set to not emit any signals in any band. > That doesn't mean they couldn't hear, or record, audio, or detect RF >signals, for recording and later transmission. >> Jim Bell N7IJS Proudly standing as the LAST >"Tech-Plus" Ham (Amateur Radio Operator) in the World. >> > > >For maximum safety: ;) > >1. Put the phone in airplane mode >2. Physically remove the battery >3. Put the phone in tinfoil faraday cage as explained here >4. Put the faraday cage in the microwave oven > >> >> >> >> >> >> -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.