10-year-old Fatima Jaafar Abdullah was killed in pager explosions in Lebanon.

Israel murders another kid again.

  • x00za@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Well yes but then you’d have to send all those messages, not too hard for a big organisation, but to make a specific message trigger it you would have to do something to the chips on it. And that’s what I’m wondering.

    • bad_alloc@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      If they can plant explosives they can 100% tap into the circuit or maybe reprogram the board. The CIA is known to be able to do this to specific devices by plucking them from the mail. Mossad could likely do their own production run and ship that to Hezbollah.

    • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      you really might not.

      before there were mobile phones there was analog dtmf wired telephones. they replaced pulse dialing and allowed for all kinds of additional signalling and triggering. ring a bell, operate a relay, kick people off so you could call the president, entire automated analog switching centers, you name it.

      when mobile networks came on the scene there were all sorts of additional triggers but because the (second gen? the ones that could do sms) signals were actually digital, there was a much wider array of possibilities. dtmf had a handful of frequencies it supported and if you wanted to do something more you had to basically make sure the entire network you were using could send, transport and receive those frequencies.

      now imagine instead of sixteen combinations of frequencies played at the same time you have access to thousands of possible triggers. once you have simple stuff like the basic receiving of text and lighting a led or playing one of several legally distinct jingles covered, you could do do much more. and people did. there were all kinds of things pagers could do through combinations of local interface and digital communication with a cell tower, all mediated through a handful of baseband chips on the pager pcb that could have the pins for stuff they wouldn’t be used for disconnected.

      but how would you make a pager set off an explosive?

      well, the same way you use a casio f91w wristwatch to. you use its built in functionality (the speaker when the alarm goes off) to trigger a battery that can deliver enough electricity into a resistor to heat it up enough to make your (primary) explosive detonate.

      in the case of a pager, those baseband chips have all kinds of on and off switching built in. it’s not hard to imagine that basic, out of the box functionality would include pulling a pin high when it gets “*97” or some such. now tie that pin to the base of a transistor across the positive and negative terminals of the battery and sitting against a little petn and you got yourself a remotely triggered explosive.

      you wouldn’t even need a pcb.

      there’s probably a lot of stuff thats incorrect in this reply. it’s late and this is off the dome.

      • x00za@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        Thanks a lot for the information. I’m getting downvoted but you are the only one at least trying to answer my question, which was what I was looking for.

        I hope we’ll get some actual confirmed details about the technical side of this attack. Your message seems like something that can very much be true.

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      If they can intercept the message where it isn’t encrypted, they can simply sniff the messages coming on the page and wait for their signal.

      Then, they can trigger the explosive to a specific message.

      That’s a wild guess though.