I though a Stingray was a fish, or a car….

Learn something new each day.

John

Apple’s anti-snitching technology could frustrate police
Ed Hardy 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.cultofmac.com_author_ed-2Dhardy_&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=oXnYIfSBZmDJST2U3UmuXTcRmv7azdCRDFwL-H_061w&s=Qcr3RnYGQPq2Xj224PD6KbReftApxUMoJoymKmoukJ0&e=>11:00
 am, March 11, 2019

Stingrays mimic cell towers, and are used by both criminals and police. 
Photo: Pexels 
<safari-reader://www.cultofmac.com/611450/apple-iphone-stingray-imsi-catcher-encryption/%E2%80%9Chttps://www.pexels.com/photo/antennas-communication-connection-frequency-579471/%E2%80%9D>
Apple wants to use encryptions to make “stingray” phone spying tools obsolete. 
The move is likely to be controversial because while these are used by 
criminals they are also employed by police.


Stingrays 101

A stingray — also called an IMSI catcher — pretends to be a cell tower. These 
devices trick a target’s phone into connecting instead of a real cell tower, 
then monitor traffic that passes between the phone and the network. 

They can be used to determine a user’s exact location, as well as what numbers 
are dialed. Some can listen in on phone calls. 

Stingrays are used by the FBI and DEA, as well as local law-enforcement 
agencies. That are also employed by police in the UK and many other countries.

And, of course, they are also used by criminals.

Apple to the rescue

Apple has patented a method of encrypting the data that travels between cell 
towers and phones, according to Britain’s Telegraph 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.telegraph.co.uk_technology_2019_03_10_apple-2Danti-2Dsnooping-2Dsystem-2Dthwart-2Dpolice-2Dmobile-2Dphone-2Dsurveillance_&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=oXnYIfSBZmDJST2U3UmuXTcRmv7azdCRDFwL-H_061w&s=thO3c_1_taz1ihTcF1sRlhgpIZxWmVpy3D3YkPezy94&e=>.
  This would prevent anyone from discovering the IMSI (international mobile 
subscriber identity) number for mobile devices, making tracking them much 
harder.

Whether this proposed tech will actually go into use is unknown. Companies 
frequently patent ideas that never reach fruition.



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