By MATT RICHTEL
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2 — One afternoon in early September, an architect
boarded his commuter train and became a cellphone vigilante. He sat
down next to a 20-something woman who he said was “blabbing away” into
her phone.
“She was using the word ‘like’ all the time. She sounded like a Valley
Girl,” said the architect, Andrew, who declined to give his last name
because what he did next was illegal.
Andrew reached into his shirt pocket and pushed a button on a black
device the size of a cigarette pack. It sent out a powerful radio
signal that cut off the chatterer’s cellphone transmission — and any
others in a 30-foot radius.
“She kept talking into her phone for about 30 seconds before she
realized there was no one listening on the other end,” he said. His
reaction when he first discovered he could wield such power? “Oh, holy
moly! Deliverance.”
As cellphone use has skyrocketed, making it hard to avoid hearing half
a conversation in many public places, a small but growing band of
rebels is turning to a blunt countermeasure: the cellphone jammer, a
gadget that renders nearby mobile devices impotent.
The technology is not new, but overseas exporters of jammers say demand
is rising and they are sending hundreds of them a month into the United
States — prompting scrutiny from federal regulators and new concern
last week from the cellphone industry. The buyers include owners of
cafes and hair salons, hoteliers, public speakers, theater operators,
bus drivers and, increasingly, commuters on public transportation.
The development is creating a battle for control of the airspace within
earshot. And the damage is collateral. Insensitive talkers impose their
racket on the defenseless, while jammers punish not just the offender,
but also more discreet chatterers.
“If anything characterizes the 21st century, it’s our inability to
restrain ourselves for the benefit of other people,” said James Katz,
director of the Center for Mobile Communication Studies at Rutgers
University. “The cellphone talker thinks his rights go above that of
people around him, and the jammer thinks his are the more important
rights.”
The jamming technology works by sending out a radio signal so powerful
that phones are overwhelmed and cannot communicate with cell towers.
The range varies from several feet to several yards, and the devices
cost from $50 to several hundred dollars. Larger models can be left on
to create a no-call zone.
Using the jammers is illegal in the United States. The radio
frequencies used by cellphone carriers are protected, just like those
used by television and radio broadcasters.
The Federal Communication Commission says people who use cellphone
jammers could be fined up to $11,000 for a first offense. Its
enforcement bureau has prosecuted a handful of American companies for
distributing the gadgets — and it also pursues their users.
Investigators from the F.C.C. and Verizon Wireless visited an upscale
restaurant in Maryland over the last year, the restaurant owner said.
The owner, who declined to be named, said he bought a powerful jammer
for $1,000 because he was tired of his employees focusing on their
phones rather than customers.
“I told them: put away your phones, put away your phones, put away your
phones,” he said. They ignored him.
The owner said the F.C.C. investigator hung around for a week, using
special equipment designed to detect jammers. But the owner had turned
his off.
The Verizon investigator was similarly unsuccessful. “He went to
everyone in town and gave them his number and said if they were having
trouble, they should call him right away,” the owner said. He said he
has since stopped using the jammer.
Of course, it would be harder to detect the use of smaller
battery-operated jammers like those used by disgruntled commuters
An F.C.C. spokesman, Clyde Ensslin, declined to comment on the issue or
the case in Maryland.
Cellphone carriers pay tens of billions of dollars to lease frequencies
from the government with an understanding that others will not
interfere with their signals. And there are other costs on top of that.
Verizon Wireless, for example, spends $6.5 billion a year to build and
maintain its network.
“It’s counterintuitive that when the demand is clear and strong from
wireless consumers for improved cell coverage, that these kinds of
devices are finding a market,” said Jeffrey Nelson, a Verizon
spokesman. The carriers also raise a public safety issue: jammers could
be used by criminals to stop people from communicating in an emergency.
In evidence of the intensifying debate over the devices, CTIA, the main
cellular phone industry association, asked the F.C.C. on Friday to
maintain the illegality of jamming and to continue to pursue violators.
It said the move was a response to requests by two companies for
permission to use jammers in specific situations, like in jails.
Individuals using jammers express some guilt about their sabotage, but
some clearly have a prankster side, along with some mean-spirited
cellphone schadenfreude. “Just watching those dumb teens at the mall
get their calls dropped is worth it. Can you hear me now? NO! Good,”
the purchaser of a jammer wrote last month in a review on a Web site
called DealExtreme.
Gary, a therapist in Ohio who also declined to give his last name,
citing the illegality of the devices, says jamming is necessary to do
his job effectively. He runs group therapy sessions for sufferers of
eating disorders. In one session, a woman’s confession was rudely
interrupted.
“She was talking about sexual abuse,” Gary said. “Someone’s cellphone
went off and they carried on a conversation.”
“There’s no etiquette,” he said. “It’s a pandemic.”
Gary said phone calls interrupted therapy all the time, despite a
no-phones policy. Four months ago, he paid $200 for a jammer, which he
placed surreptitiously on one side of the room. He tells patients that
if they are expecting an emergency call, they should give out the front
desk’s number. He has not told them about the jammer.
Gary bought his jammer from a Web site based in London called
PhoneJammer.com. Victor McCormack, the site’s operator, says he ships
roughly 400 jammers a month into the United States, up from 300 a year
ago. Orders for holiday gifts, he said, have exceeded 2,000.
Kumaar Thakkar, who lives in Mumbai, India, and sells jammers online,
said he exported 20 a month to the United States, twice as many as a
year ago. Clients, he said, include owners of cafes and hair salons,
and a New York school bus driver named Dan.
“The kids think they are sneaky by hiding low in the seats and using
their phones,” Dan wrote in an e-mail message to Mr. Thakkar thanking
him for selling the jammer. “Now the kids can’t figure out why their
phones don’t work, but can’t ask because they will get in trouble! It’s
fun to watch them try to get a signal.”
Andrew, the San Francisco-area architect, said using his jammer was
initially fun, and then became a practical way to get some quiet on the
train. Now he uses it more judiciously.
“At this point, just knowing I have the power to cut somebody off is
satisfaction enough,” he said.
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Devices Enforce Silence of Cellphones, Illegally
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