(no title)
beaner
|
4 years ago
Of all the conspiracy theories out there, this one, to me, has the highest coverage-to-interestingness ratio. It just seems like a teen hacked an AV system and did a goofy presentation. I'm surprised that type of thing isn't more common, and I'm befuddled as to why this one gets so much attention.
coldpie|4 years ago
nsxwolf|4 years ago
throwawaygh|4 years ago
Hijacking small town public access channels was fairly easy. Taking over the feed for two different stations in Chicago is a whole different level. The basic hack is the same, but "just scale it up" isn't trivial in this case.
fortran77|4 years ago
BoxOfRain|4 years ago
I'd guess that interfering with a digital TV signal today is considerably harder than an old analogue TV signal.
GekkePrutser|4 years ago
Broadcasting DVB-T is pretty trivial and people have even done it with a raspberry pi and a piece of wire (in an awful distortion-creating way) but getting people to tune to it will be harder. Also the power amplifier bit would be tougher but doable.
In fact since the days of SDR you can broadcast almost anything. You can run your own 4G mobile base station with one of those.
mark-r|4 years ago