Bob Krygier
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Not specifically like that, but, you know, it started a handful of years ago where First Amendment auditors decided they wanted to videotape and look at everything that law enforcement does.
It's a skill that you learn and you learn that as long as they're a decent distance away, you just kind of ignore them.
Like you said, they're like gnats.
Well, if they were asking about strictly Internet service going out, the jammers have a real small radius to work in.
If the whole neighborhood went out, it'd be probably more likely that someone cut something in a box or at the house or houses to knock off the service.
That's going to cut all the Internet activity, not just the individual Wi-Fi signals.
So there's, you know, it just shows.
That means you can't get on the Internet anymore.
Your Internet is now broken.
You can't talk to anything.
You can't stream anything.
No data is coming in.
No data is going out.
What the jammer does is it just affects the Wi-Fi signals from your router inside your house, all your devices that are pushing information out.
So the Internet is still working.
It's just being jammed.
If the cables are cut or there's a big disruption, that's when the whole neighborhood would go out.
That's when you'd get Comcast or Xfinity or whoever your provider is saying, hey, guess what?
The Internet's down in your neighborhood.
You can't do anything.