21 comments

  • blantonl 1395 days ago
    Hi there! I'm the owner and operator of Broadcastify, which is the platform that powers all the apps that provide police scanners and public safety communications online. I'm an active HN reader and would be glad to answer any questions folks have.

    It's an interesting business to be in these days...

    • kaitai 1395 days ago
      Hey, just wanted to say thank you. I'm in the Twin Cities (Mpls/St Paul MN) and I've absolutely been on Broadcastify for hours in the last week. On Friday/Saturday night things were getting pretty wild near my house, and being able to hear where dispatch was reporting incidents was really helpful in being able to calibrate my sense of personal danger, to be frank. Just sitting on the front porch listening to the scanner and watching for cars with no license plates the last few nights... and using what I hear on the scanner to try to convince the guys with their impromptu militia that they ought to at least sit down in f*(&ing lawn chairs to indicate they're local instead of pacing around after curfew looking like the very folks we don't want to see (they had the police dispatched on them 3+ times).

      Broadcastify, Unicorn Riot, and some select trusted sources on Twitter have helped me understand much better what is going on as these protests unfold.

    • z9e 1395 days ago
      I don't have any questions but I'd just like to say how much I love what you're doing, thank you.

      When I was a kid I loved geeking out with my scanner I bought at radio shack, your site relights this flame for me and it's awesome to explore all of broadcasts going on in the world through your site.

      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        Thank you for the kind comments. I started out in the hobby the exact same way, my parents got me a scanner for Christmas and I was hooked ever since.
    • kebman 1395 days ago
      Isn't police radio usually scrambled? It is where I am in Norway. It was legal to listen to it before it was scrambled though. Not sure if it's legal to de-scramble it, if it's at all possible. AFAIK you can still listen to the ambulance channel, though, but sometimes the details are ... grisly.
      • shadowgovt 1395 days ago
        In the United States, no. Police, emergency, first responder radio transmissions are generally in the clear. I don't know the precise history of it, but I have always assumed it is a combination of legacy (emergency radio in the United States is very old, and predates cheap and convenient electronic encryption standards), compatibility (first responder funding and maintenance in the United States is generally a local and state issue, so practices vary widely; for anybody to successfully come up with an encryption standard would require an unusual top-down standardization that has only been seen in extraordinary circumstances, such as after September 11th), and utility (in a disaster scenario where disparate groups coming from disparate points of the country might need to quickly ad hoc communications with each other, the absolute last thing you want is lives on the line while people are configuring their encryption protocols for their radios... Nor do you want to deny local volunteers the ability to understand where first responders are and how to get to them by having that information communicated in scramble).
        • simcop2387 1395 days ago
          This is starting to change, but it does take time since it usually requires replacing hundreds of radios at one time and a bunch of additional training on how to use the new radios properly.
          • RNCTX 1395 days ago
            A friend of mine in Little Rock connected the dots on how police were ignoring burglary reports en masse to rig the stats in favor of businesses and realtors with a vested interest in lower perception of crime than there really was.

            The radios were encrypted to stop him from doing so within the next calendar quarter. He was plotting dispatch calls versus FOIA reports of burglaries to find the variances.

            I’d expect this to be a growing trend. Local political corruption is ubiquitous in USA, that’s why they accuse every other country of it.

            • HenryBemis 1394 days ago
              I do not live in the USA, and I do not want to politicize my question. I am clearly asking out of curiousity:

              Would that be something related with the way that voting areas (whatever they are called in the USA)/Gerrymandering is causing?

              Area-X on the map (that doesn't have any straight/simple lines in its perimeter!!!) has data hidden, while Area-Z seems to have "all the problems"?

              Apart from real-estate fraud, I am trying to imagine what other areas of life may this impact.

              (again I am NOT using -alphabetically- Dem-Rem notation)

              • RNCTX 1394 days ago
                The problem is multi-faceted and money explains most of it. The fact that wealth is associated with racial prejudice is tangential.

                1) In the USA there is very little concern for local elections compared to say, the presidency. Most people don't even know who their local elected officials are, and most don't show up to vote in elections that only concern local issues. The only people who participate in local politics are those who have a business interest in influencing local political offices.

                2) Yes, a lot of this can be studied with geo data, from both sides of the coin! From the standpoint of the police, maintaining a presence in multiple areas of a city is a matter of time and distance. How long does it take a police car to go from the dispatch location to the scene of a reported crime? From the standpoint of a criminal who is robbing houses, there's a consideration of "how long is it going to take police to get here" if they see that police have no presence in an area outside of the times when a crime is reported. You can also see disproportionate enforcement of criminal laws based on property location. A lot of people don't want to see house prices negatively affected by crime statistics in wealthy areas. When a kid from an affluent part of a city gets caught with illegal drugs, for example, you won't see a large police presence in the neighborhood showing up to investigate. More police means more reports, and reports become statistics, which then in turn negatively affect property values. On the other hand if a poor kid from an apartment in a poor neighborhood gets caught with illegal drugs, the police will happily go there and harass adjacent residences, cars, neighbors, and for lack of a better word turn it into a fishing trip to try and find more petty crimes to charge more people with.

                3) Local tax revenue in the USA is mostly from two sources: retail sales taxes collected at the point of sale in stores, and yearly taxes on real estate. A lot of retail sales tax was lost when people began shopping online more than shopping in stores in the past ten years. Most larger online stores now collect and pay local sales taxes (like Amazon) but they did not do so initially, it has only recently been required of them to do so. Prior to changes in local sales tax laws, the responsibility to pay sales tax ultimately fell on the customer rather than the store. Due to that, the reliance on property taxes was even more prevalent than it is now. (1)

                4) There is no profit in jailing criminals. There is profit in releasing criminals after charging them fines instead of sending them to jail. Again, for the purpose of maximizing government revenue, there have been efforts to jail fewer non-violent criminals and instead charge them fines and let them go. This is especially the case when there are quite literally financial services built upon paying bail and fines in the USA. Lets say a burglar is arrested robbing a house. It might take 6 months to a year to give him a trial, so unless he has some sort of demonstrable violent criminal history a local judge will simply charge him a bail fee and let him go. Presumably he can't pay the fee, so there are local bail loan services in the USA that, for typically 10% of the amount of the bail, will assume the risk of the burglar not showing up for his trial for him. So the burglar won't have to pay the 5,000 dollars bail he was assessed, he will only have to pay the bail bond company 500 dollars. (2)

                (1) Property taxes are not entirely objective. In most places in the USA, people pay property taxes based on appraised value, not on actual realized gains or losses. For instance, if you buy a house, in the first year after the sale you will be charged property tax based on the price you paid for the house, but in subsequent years the local government will compare your houses to sales of similar houses in your neighborhood. If prices rise, they will charge you more based on the assumption that your house has increased in value.

                (2) For the most part local judges are elected, not appointed, so they can be bribed with campaign contributions from bail bond companies who don't want those judges to compel them to pay for accused criminals who don't show up for trials.

            • chromatin 1394 days ago
              This is fascinating, and seems like the kind of thing a national-level investigative reporter would love to cover. Has it been covered anywhere or pitched to anyone?
              • RNCTX 1392 days ago
                It would require some pretty high end text-to-speech tooling, or a lot of manual labor.

                In the single city case he had volunteers check the text-to-speech outputs and manually fill in addresses that were missed. His accuracy rate was quite low with 2014 tools so it was a lot of manual work to transcribe the addresses from the recordings. I suppose text-to-speech tools are better since then, but these recordings are still quite dirty. You're talking analog radio recordings of poorly trained personnel who have regional accents, mumbles, inconsistent phrasing, etc.

                Try to find tooling to get good text-to-speech accuracy from some sample source like the recordings on liveatc.net (air traffic controllers) and see how accurate your results are, noting the difference between controllers (who are trained in proper phraseology and speaking techniques) and pilots (who are not).

          • dillondoyle 1395 days ago
            Denver's is gone too. i've wondered if the solution might just be a 'lost' scanner - but I don't know the technical details. Are keys rotated? Are the 'hard wired' into devices?
            • addHocker 1395 days ago
              Could the content be derived from meta. Lenght of conversation, time of conversation?
          • tzs 1395 days ago
            Can't they run a newer encrypted system on separate channels than the older system is using, with some kind of repeater set up between the two?

            You'd need to upgrade at the base station upfront to have both the old and new systems, and add a repeater, but you could then take your time replacing the radios in the field instead of having to replace them all at once.

            • baddox 1394 days ago
              Sure, but as long as a single unencrypted bridge is running, anyone else within range of that bridge can listen, so you won’t really get significant benefits of encryption until the switchover is complete.
          • thephyber 1395 days ago
            Yeah, San Jose just scrambled theirs 6 weeks ago. One article from 2015 claims only 2 departments in California did this for the primary radio communications, so things are changing that way.
        • syshum 1395 days ago
          There are more Encrypted than you think, though most Responsible Dept will leave the general dispatch channel open and only encrypt tactical talk groups

          My City Encrypts 100% communications including EMS, Fire, Police and Emergency repose, it is a stupid policy but...

          https://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/Encrypted_Agencies

          • belorn 1395 days ago
            I understand the desire to be able to listen in/oversight during riots and conflicts between demonstrators and police. It make less sense in cases where someone is a victim of a crime or a patient being transported as such individuals are protected from the public prying eye. When recording devices and storage is so cheap as it is now it should be assumed that any communication traveling in clear is captured and stored.
            • syshum 1394 days ago
              >>It make less sense in cases where someone is a victim of a crime or a patient being transported as such individuals are protected from the public prying eye

              Few things there, first "victim of a crime", most area's criminal reports are public records as they should be. Allowing the police to operate in secret is a very bad thing

              Further outside of location information is a rare that other personal info is transmitted over the air anyway, general descriptions etc sure but...

              Finally I think the public value, and transparency we get from having open air dispatch far far far far outweighs the limited privacy concerns. People say the same things when police are mandated to wear body cams, just like in those situations the public right to know what the police are actually doing far outweighs some minor privacy concerns.

              We need FULL transparency in policing right now.

              • belorn 1394 days ago
                Here in Sweden, the public record goes in effect only after the investigation has been closed. Before that it is kept secret. The record can also be partially hidden in some circumstances in order to protect the integrity of the victim.

                And even when its public record, there is a large consensus that some of it should not be published to a larger audience. There was a now old incident where pirate bay had a torrent of a public record covering the investigation of death of several children. It was one of the few torrents that if I recall right, the pirate bay voluntarily took down. A lot of people commented that police should have used more discretion in what they put in the public record.

                Body cams has the same issue. It is good that they exist. There is however cases when the record should be kept secret. The default should always be transparency, with exceptions when there is good reason to keep it away from the public. As a obvious example, the body cam recording from a police arriving to a rape scene with the undressed victim should not be public record.

        • kebman 1394 days ago
          Before they scrambled the police radio in Norway, they would sometimes phone in stuff to the central when they wanted to deliver personal or protected information. Sometimes they'd omit the phone-in, though, to save time.

          Interestingly, tapping in on mobile phone conversations, and de-scrambling them, is legal in Norway, at least for the state. AFAIK they still don't need a court ruling to do so, like they do when they want to wiretap someone. This is because the radio waves aren't regulated the same way as wired connections in Norway. I suspect this might be similar in the rest of the EU as well (of which Norway is merely a de-facto member). It might also be something to look into if you're an American, to check whether this is also reflected in either federal or state laws.

        • bryanrasmussen 1395 days ago
          there are channels of police and other agencies that can be encrypted, generally of course for the police to be encrypted the local municipality needs to decide to do that and pay the bills, hence it doesn't happen - which is a good thing.

          I'm thinking a traffic analysis app https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_analysis might be useful for when encryption becomes more widespread.

      • filoleg 1395 days ago
        Afaik some channels are encrypted and there is no way for normal people to listen in on those. But majority of "normal" police and emergency response channels are not, and those are the ones you can tune in to on those websites.
      • ISL 1395 days ago
        It would seem reasonable to be able to FOIA the encryption keys in US locations where it is encrypted.
        • ceejayoz 1395 days ago
          Doubtful.

          https://www.foia.gov/faq.html

          > Exemption 7: Information compiled for law enforcement purposes that: (A) Could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement proceedings

          I'd fully expect other exemptions to apply if you FOIAed the White House's SSL private key or something.

          • Scoundreller 1394 days ago
            I’m Canada, usually you have to give everything to the FOIA department, and then they redact it.

            I think that would make the keyholders soil themselves if they had to send the keys over even for a second like that.

        • AuthorizedCust 1395 days ago
          FOIA is a federal law. Each state has its own law. For example, Texas's is the Texas Public Information Act (TPIA). The standards could vary state by state.
          • eli 1395 days ago
            All of them have pretty broad law enforcement exemptions.
        • NovemberWhiskey 1395 days ago
          Even if you could, how long do you think your FOIA request would take to get processed vs. the rekeying frequency of the encryption?
          • iNate2000 1394 days ago
            key management is hard
    • bochoh 1395 days ago
      I was investigating starting a small personalized Scanner app with an AI twist but found that you're no longer granting licensees for mobile app developers - basically stopping all innovation in this area.

      "The broadcastify audio feed catalog API is only available to approved licensees. We are currently not issuing addtional licenses to mobile device developers at this time. "

      Can you explain the rational here?

      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        Yes, it's pretty simple. There has been a proliferation of apps that all do the same thing - front end our feeds, and so we're protecting the investment that our core partners have made to write apps.

        We are extremely plugged in to AI efforts that are occuring around the use of our feeds, and so we have a pulse on what is going to work and not going to work in those area. You are more than welcome to use the feeds to develop AI models and present that back to us so that we could grant an exception, but the simple reality is that 99.9% of developers that want access to our feeds are simply trying to get yet another scanner app in the marketplace. It just dulites the environment, cheapens the brand, and presents a race to the bottom scenario in the app stores.

        I'll readily admit that we don't "know it all" and there could be some serious innovation out there, but the app store market has left a serious bad taste in our mouth of nefarious actors who will go to the ends of the earth to make a buck vs innovate.

        • VectorLock 1395 days ago
          Just wanted to say I appreciate how candid and direct your answer is, even though it might be displeasing to some people to hear.
        • bochoh 1395 days ago
          Really appreciate the feedback here. That makes good sense on the low quality money grabs.
        • dvsfish 1395 days ago
          Thorough and satisfying explanation.
    • autojoechen 1395 days ago
      Is there a text transcript feature for users who may want to search through the communications? I'm curious how well those speech-to-text tools work for the audio feeds.
      • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
        It's a hard problem. I'm prototyping this here [1]. Any user can tweak or vote on transcriptions, so my goal is to use the user annotations to help train models and make it better.

        [1] https://feeds.talonvoice.com

        Repo is here if you need to report (or fix) bugs in the webapp: https://github.com/lunixbochs/feeds

        If you want to help with development, reach out and I can onboard + give some test data.

        • dspoka 1395 days ago
          Great to see you working on this!

          I was wondering if you could estimate what it would cost to have always on recording of all these radio conversations, cost of running this speech2text ML and cost of labeling this data.

          I think having these rough estimates will make donations easier for people.

          • imroot 1395 days ago
            I've got a year+ of the Ohio MARCS-IP site in Hamilton County Ohio recorded. Let me know if you need some data -- I'd be more than happy to get you the dump.

            (trunk-recorder + rdio scanner).

            The UI is:

            https://cvgscan.iwdo.xyz for the live stuff, but, let me know if you're interested in the data -- my email is in my profile

          • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
            Great question! Unfortunately the long term costs aren't clear yet, right now I'm using google speech as a bootstrapping technique, but that is prohibitively expensive to run long term.

            I think once my models are viable enough to do this at scale, the cost will be basically the cost of running a dedicated server per N streams. So $100-300/mo per N streams? Where N could roughly be at least 100 concurrent streams per server. I will know this better in "stage 2" where I'm attempting to scale this up. It's also a fairly distributed problem so I can look into doing it folding@home style, or even have the stream's originator running transcription in some cases to keep costs down.

      • mstade 1395 days ago
        I suppose maybe you can try running it through Otter[1]. We’ve used it with varying degrees of success when interviewing customers, and it’s also what powers Zoom’s transcript feature which is what we use these days.

        It’s hit and miss, in my opinion. It’ll give you a good enough base to refine the transcript from, but I’ve yet to come across a transcript that doesn’t need editing. (Which is annoying, since Zoom doesn’t give you that option.) I’d say it’s more valuable having the tool than not, but don’t expect miracles.

        (I’m not affiliated with Otter or Zoom in any way.)

        [1]: https://otter.ai/login

      • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
        Hi, this is a difficult problem but I've been working hard on it for a couple of days with some help. I have a pipeline and website that automatically transcribes scanner feeds that is working pretty well, and the website allows users to correct and vote on transcriptions.

        My goal is to train my own models on the corrected transcriptions (I work in the speech recognition space) so I can transcribe many live feeds inexpensively.

        I will respond with a link here (hopefully very soon today) once I've fixed a couple of remaining UX bugs.

        • ciarannolan 1395 days ago
          I thought there were some open source speech-to-text models already [1].

          Maybe there's something unique about how these low-quality radio transmissions sound that make these ineffective?

          [1] https://voice.mozilla.org/en

          • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
            I work in the speech recognition space and train my own models already. The existing open-source models aren't very good at noisy radio speech. I will specialize one of my models to this task once I have some data from the site.
            • jcims 1395 days ago
              As you’re well aware but HN folks may not be, it’s not just that it’s noisy, it’s heavily coded, contextually bankrupt speech between multiple parties that spend all day in contact with each other. Dispatchers in particular seem to have superhuman ability to extract information from completely unintelligible garbage.

              Are you doing any kind of speaker identification?

              • blantonl 1395 days ago
                This is a very accurate description of the problem space. Every municipality has their own jargon, vernacular, and ways to communicate brevity which is key in public safety communications. The communications are often digitized over vocoders that are less than optimal, and then you have the process of recovering voice from noisy communcations channels.

                This is definitely a very hard problem to solve.

                • jcims 1395 days ago
                  Indeed. The only reason I know is that I tried a few years back and realized that I was asking the computer to do something that I couldn't even do. Anyone that doubts it, just listen to the NYPD feed and try to transcribe for just a minute or two.

                  https://www.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/32890

                  (edit: also, thank you for keeping this service up and running for so long, have been a regular user since the early RR days. Would love to have a comment/live chat option if your backlog is getting bare :))

                  • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
                    Ok, here we go: https://feeds.talonvoice.com

                    Repo is here if you need to report (or just fix :D) bugs in the webapp: https://github.com/lunixbochs/feeds

                    • jcims 1395 days ago
                      Whoa this is awesome! Love the option to fix a transcription, should hopefully help with training if you get some traction.
                      • lunixbochs 1395 days ago
                        Thanks! I did a lot of tests and no existing ASR I found could do it to 100%, so I'm using the best ASR I could find and hoping users will help with transcriptions if they want to see it succeed and scale.
            • ciarannolan 1395 days ago
              Got it, thanks. Good luck!
      • panda88888 1395 days ago
        Could we run the audio stream through YouTube livestream and enable caption?
    • denkmoon 1395 days ago
      I used your service to listen to emergency service radios during the recent Australian Bushfires. The fires got really close to my family's home, your service allowed me to keep up with what was going on in real time. It really helped. Thanks.
    • kennxfl 1395 days ago
      Is there a way of legitimately detecting Stingrays? I understand this is the kind of situation where they are actively deployed despite all the social awareness.
      • millzlane 1395 days ago
        I remember a few apps that you could watch the towers in your area and be alerted or warned when new ones popped up. But one app needed to be trained to remember the towers in your area.

        Something like this maybe? https://f-droid.org/en/packages/info.zamojski.soft.towercoll...

      • oasisbob 1395 days ago
        University of Washington researchers are working on this, their technique has used roaming car sharing vehicles and anomaly analysis:

        https://seaglass.cs.washington.edu/

      • swebs 1395 days ago
        I guess if you were to build a map of static cell towers, it would be easy to see if a new one suddenly pops up.
        • jackhack 1395 days ago
          additional temporary "towers" are sometimes added when very high but transient network loads are anticipated (such as a music festival, or county fair, etc.). not all new towers are sniffers.
          • g_p 1395 days ago
            If anyone is interested in trying to work around this, I have a few ideas for how to try distinguish a real and fake cell. Temporary event "pop-up" networks should announce valid neighbouring cells.

            Your baseband (radio) might expose neighbour cell data - iPhone field test menu shows the announced neighbour data.

            Hypothesis is that a rogue tower will not have valid neighbour cells announced. They could try listen in for valid ones and advertise those.

            A lot of the ways to detect will depend on the generation of network being spoofed - 4G networks will also advertise signalling for legacy 2G and 3G circuit switched networks. Rogue sites might not.

      • LinuxBender 1395 days ago
        Sweet talk a cellular network engineer into giving you the engineering firmware for your phone and a list of all the cell ID's.
        • gruez 1395 days ago
          stingrays can't spoof cell ids?
          • LinuxBender 1395 days ago
            They can and do, but they and the other cell sites can't up and move around. All cell sites have multiple transceivers that are directional. Each site has a unique cell ID and each transceiver has a unique ID. Your phone has GPS. If you drive around, you can find out who doesn't belong. Be careful about publicly disclosing this information.
            • callalex 1395 days ago
              >Be careful about publicly disclosing this information.

              Why, what do I have to fear about that in the United States?

              • MertsA 1394 days ago
                The creator of CryptoCat was targeted by the FBI. Not because he was suspected of committing a crime, just because they didn't like him creating open source encryption software. They actually had Hector Monsegur (Sabu) try to entrap him multiple times to try and come up with some trumped up reason to convict him.

                https://nadimkobeissi.tumblr.com/page/29

                Moxie Marlinspike can't even fly domestically without jumping through hoops and travelling internationally means they try to seize his electronics and demand the passwords.

              • LinuxBender 1395 days ago
                I suppose that depends on your tolerance for drama and legal cartooney. One of my former employers and a three letter agency would go after people publicly disclosing such things and the people always backed down. The cooperation between nations can blur the lines depending on what nation you are in. That said, I am not a lawyer so it is probably best to get their input rather than mine.
            • ISL 1395 days ago
              The disclosure of facts is protected by the First Amendment.
              • lawnchair_larry 1395 days ago
                There are sometimes non-legal reasons to be careful.
              • vertex-four 1395 days ago
                I dunno if you noticed, but the law doesn't always exactly mean much in terms of what actually happens.
              • elihu 1395 days ago
                That isn't universally true.
              • gruez 1395 days ago
                Does that work for DRM encryption keys? I think sony went after a few people who leaked either the blu-ray encryption keys, or the signing keys for one of their consoles.
              • ceejayoz 1395 days ago
      • krageon 1395 days ago
        You can look up where the towers are and perform triangulation on the ones that you are connected to given multiple antennae. It'll cost you some hardware and you'll probably be writing some software also.

        Another option can be just seeding a few phones around the area and have them report moving (or transient) towers.

    • larrywright 1395 days ago
      Is there a way to report incorrect feeds? I was listening to our local scanner feed last night and growing increasingly alarmed at the amount of activity, until I realized that the scanner audio was actually for a larger city an hour away. I’ve listened before and it’s been correct, but last night it was definitely not.
      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        You can always open a support ticket with us. Feeds are provided by volunteers so we battle quality issues all the time. It's a tough problem to solve.
    • _curious_ 1395 days ago
      Interesting product/service! I've been familiar with it in the past but really used it a lot over this last week - thank you for offering a free n accessible tool.

      When, Why and how did you get into it?

      Does it generate meaningful/worthwhile revenue or is to more to cover overhead? (I only noticed the occasional 30 second commercial intro) Maybe you have a lot of premium subs?

      Why sometimes do certain cities/counties change their feed? For example one night the Minneapolis police were on a completely different county that was hours away.

      Majority of the time, these feeds are relatively low key right...with actual concerning/escalated incidents few and far between. Wondering: is there someway to us ML to identify specific things and provide push notifications to people in a given geography around that? For example it could listen for "shots fired" in a specific area and notify me via sms or whatnot when that occurs.

      And AI could be used to show more of an abstract map view if and when "violence" is rising based on action on the scanner, right?

      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        My Grandmother had a police scanner that she used to listen to drama going on in her small town in Virginia. Old ladies with police scanners is still quite common. It sparked an interest and my parents got me one as a Christmas present. I spent many years in the IBM ecosystem as an technical SE, but developed an online database (RadioReference.com) in the late 90's that consolidated frequency information for all the municipalities around the world. When online streaming came to the Internet, I purchased a small business that was putting scanners online and launched it as Broadcastify.

        The business is wildly successful. Revenue is a split between paying subscribers, license and royalty revenue, and advertising.

        About 90% of the feeds are provided by volunteers who simply connect a radio to their computer and broadcast to us. The other 10% are actually provided by the agencies themselves. We probably turn over 20 feeds a day, so coverage comes and goes all the time. There is a lot of work going on in the ML / AI space around the content, but it is a hard problem to solve because the quality of the content diverges wildly. Vernacular differs. Coverage comes and goes. Organizations like Citizen, which have HUGE funding (60 MM lol!), are trying to solve this, but they still end up just employing armies of workers to sift through the data and audio and normalize it all.

        We're doing a lot of innovation in the space on our end, including using SDRs to vacuum up wide swaths of RF and then store call data, which is going to be the next "revolution" in our space. Interesting times...

        • oasisbob 1395 days ago
          > including using SDRs to vacuum up wide swaths of RF and then store call data

          Been there, done that. The technique is scary-good, even with cheap hardware.

          Capture everything, sort by talkgroups, form listen queues ("police", "fire", "police NOT university",) prioritize, and place recordings in queues. Stream queues through ice cast. Drop low-pri messages if you fall too far behind real-time.

          Speaking of: if anyone wants nearly two years of uninterrupted Seattle police radio archives (and everything else from KCERS), they should get in touch.

          • lozaning 1395 days ago
            Im doing the same right now in Minneapolis. Running Hack RF and Unitrunker V2, tapped straight into Minneapolis City Center Multicast. I have a radio reference account so Unitrunker just syncs to its database and all that info auto magically appears.

            Here's my live youtube stream and archives: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuCP1ZetSEA

            • oasisbob 1395 days ago
              Will unitrunker handle multiple simultaneous captures at once?

              One of the magical things about the SDR approach is being able to synthesize dozens of streams from a single antenna and several SDR devices. The setup I had could capture ~10 simultaneous transmissions before things started to fall apart.

              • lozaning 1395 days ago
                I think there's a roundabout way to go about doing that. Essnetially create a lot of additional voice VFO's and then set each one of those VFos to have only 1 talk group with its priority set to 1. And then set the output of each VFO to a different VB audio cable in, then source would be VB audio cable out in audacity.

                The hack RF definitely supports grabbing an entire 20Mhz swath of bandwidth that covers all the signal and voice frequencies.

                Id be super curious to hear more about your setup, both hardware and software.

              • madengr 1395 days ago
                This should, at least the last time I used it:

                https://github.com/DSheirer/sdrtrunk

                I wrote this parallel scanner. I had tried incorporating DSD, but couldn’t handle more than 2 streams. Though that was several years ago.

                https://github.com/madengr/ham2mon

          • blantonl 1395 days ago
            Yup, see our Broadcastify Calls Implementation

            https://www.broadcastify.com/calls

        • benjaminclark 1395 days ago
          Can you elaborate on the current ML/AI work and the specific goals? I can think of a few cool use cases, but curious what all is being looked at.

          What organization do you mean by "Citizen"? Not aware of any major nonprofits that go by just this one word.

        • _curious_ 1395 days ago
          Right on thank you so much for taking the time to answer my questions...love the history, glad to hear it's "wildly successful" and godspeed to you and everyone else going forward.
    • lerie1982 1395 days ago
      I just wanted to weigh in here and say thank you for this service, I have been using it for quite some time now to monitor and follow emergency services in my area to report news. A truly awesome and bad ass service.
    • mariojv 1395 days ago
      Thanks so much for providing this service!

      Here in San Antonio, there were over 1000 tuned in a few nights ago. Some local news channel management asked reporters on the ground to leave the scene quite early in the night, so this service was really invaluable in helping me understand what was going on in real time. The difference between live local news and reality on the ground was drastic at times.

      How did you get into this business?

    • imjustsaying 1395 days ago
      Your site helps me know what's happening when I'm in Chicago. Robert thanks you for your service and for checking those keys. o7
    • PappaPatat 1395 days ago
      Thank you so much for the possibility. I grew up with scanners and am truly reminiscing while listening on these intercepts.

      Here in Europe there is close to no police still using analog and listening to air traffic control or couriers just does not cut it for me.

      Bought the app, hope you'll be able to keep this up.

    • save_ferris 1395 days ago
      Do you have a sense of how many precincts are encrypting their scanner comms these days?
      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        Every year new technology drives some agencies to remove their routine general dispatch operations from public access. Some agencies really like their communications to be publically available, and some don't.

        If I had to back-of-the-napkin it, I would say that 10-15% of all law enforcement general dispatch operations are encrypted full time. The vast majority in this country is still unencrypted.

      • duskwuff 1395 days ago
        Not OP, but: many common voice encryption implementations have serious usability issues which lead to users inadvertently -- or often even intentionally -- disabling encryption

        https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/p25sec0810...

        • parliament32 1395 days ago
          That was actually a great read, thanks!
    • tzs 1395 days ago
      In a few states it is illegal to use a police scanner while operating a motor vehicle unless you have a license from the FCC or permission from local law enforcement.

      Do any of those states consider those laws to apply to using one of those apps?

      PS: for those who live in one of those states (Indiana, Florida, Kentucky, Minnesota, and New York) a ham radio license counts, and the entry level ham license (Technician) is not very hard to get.

    • primogen 1395 days ago
      Thank you for you this! For the last couple of years, I play Broadcastify combined with one of those downbeat live channels in YouTube while I code. This after I tired of http://youarelistening.to/
    • ISL 1395 days ago
      Any surprises with the uptick in traffic? Do you see increased usage ahead of news-reports of protests?

      Also: Thank you! I've been listening to Broadcastify both at the beginning of the Covid-19 outbreak and yesterday, to track nascent looting <2 km from our home.

      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        The past few months has resulted in us seeing record traffic and revenue... it turns out that people stranded at home due to stay at home orders are thirsty for entertainment and information.

        I can't say that I'm really surprised by anything anymore after all that has happened over the past 3 months :)

    • pmarreck 1395 days ago
      Is there a way to listen to the broadcasts in a web browser without Flash Player?
      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        We’ve abandoned flash as our default player long ago in favor of html5 audio. I’m not sure why you’d be seeing flash as a default unless you previously set flash as your default player.
        • yellowapple 1395 days ago
          When navigating via the map to Nevada, then Washoe County, the big button for "Launch County Web Player" defaults to the Flash version with no apparent option to change it.

          The other options below it seem to correctly default to HTML5, though, so I'm able to listen to RPD's radio chatter.

    • vidanay 1395 days ago
      Is the poor audio quality a function of the participating scanners that feed your service, your infrastructure, or the current workload? My local feed is nearly unintelligible.
      • blantonl 1395 days ago
        It is solely a function of the participating scanners. There is a report a problem link on each feed's page which allows you to let the provider know there is a problem.

        There are a lot of times providers simply don't know that there is a quality problem.

        Edit: there are also a lot of problem vectors. Poor reception, failing equipment, old equipment, and even the case of some providers that don't care and just rush a feed online just to get the premium subscription.

        Crowdsourcing content isn't always easy :)

    • ChuckMcM 1395 days ago
      Thank you for your service! FWIW, this was one of the things I wanted to do and learning about SDRs made that possible.
    • aviditas 1393 days ago
      Have you considered putting the app on f-droid?
    • rowawey 1395 days ago
      Oh nice!! I was listening to your platform for NYC Citywide-1 for a couple of hours last night after someone in YT chat of Louis Rossmann's security cam feed (retail store that fixes Macs in Manhattan) dropped some Broadcastify stream links.

      https://www.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/32890 CW-1

      https://www.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/31439 Manhattan

  • LgWoodenBadger 1395 days ago
    Anecdotal, but an ex-friend cop told me YEARS ago that they never use their radios for "sensitive" communications anyway, they just call each other on their cell phones so that there are no records of their conversations.
    • myself248 1395 days ago
      I remember, years ago, that they'd use their Mobile Data Terminals for anything "sensitive", again to get around scanner listeners.

      Apparently they didn't know about MTDMon software. Which was even cooler than listening on a scanner, because you could set it to beep the PC speaker if your keywords appeared in the feed.

      I assume all that is encrypted now, but it sure wasn't at the time!

      • JshWright 1395 days ago
        Most MDTs just use LTE connections these days.
    • oasisbob 1395 days ago
      Matt Blaze has a classic talk about crypto failures by LE using radios. In short, the feds still screw it up and accidentally operate in the clear.

      I've personally heard a Stingray being used for an arrest being broadcast on an open, analog channel.

      https://youtu.be/re9nG81Vft8 (Can't find the original.)

      • dijksterhuis 1395 days ago
        > Don't mess with the Postal Inspector.
    • themodelplumber 1395 days ago
      In practice you will still hear sensitive information from time to time. Psychology is so dynamic that emotion easily finds a way to route around these invisible barriers. It's hard work and they're humans...
    • vsareto 1395 days ago
      They use Signal too
    • Lammy 1395 days ago
      *no publicly-accessible records
  • Simulacra 1395 days ago
    Most of our local departments use encrypted radios.

    "Over the past few years, an increasing number of municipalities and police departments, including the District’s, have begun encrypting their radioed communications.."[1.]

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/social-issues/last-of-t...

    • AlexandrB 1395 days ago
      I don't think this is a positive development. It's already too easy to blackhole information that could be used to hold police accountable (body cams, arrest reports, etc.). This removes yet another avenue for citizens/journalists.
      • sneak 1394 days ago
        The people who set the laws around radio communication regulation, those who implement that regulation, as well as the people who set police policy and budgets, prefer it that way, as they are part of the ownership class that the police actually do protect (and not the ones they murder or oppress indiscriminately).

        To them, the general public having visibility into the things done by the police or the military in their name is a bad thing, and the public’s money should be spent on systems to conceal those activities from public view. Transparency is something to be avoided, in the view of secrecy-heavy, military-inspired DHS (which is the driver, both policy and funding, behind much of the local domestic COMSEC upgrades).

        If you want it to change, you need to bark up a different tree.

    • catalogia 1395 days ago
      What I heard is many police departments now encrypt their radio communications, with the exception of dispatch which they keep in the clear as a concession to the media and ambulance chasers.
      • themodelplumber 1395 days ago
        They also refer each other to their MDT or cell when working, which is equally effective at cutting out the public (whether intended or no). In many rural areas, analog FM voice is still in use with no encryption, which I've heard is at least sometimes due to more favorable propagation characteristics for reception at a distance.
        • hajile 1394 days ago
          Digital signal is clearer, but all or nothing.

          I know a fire chief who told me that some stations have switched back to analog. Some firefighters allegedly went silent and their bodies were found later. I guess it's believed that they attempted to radio for help, but the "digital cliff" stopped anything at all from getting through. If they'd heard someone calling for help, they could have gone there -- even if they didn't know exactly what the issue was.

          I'm sure pricing is a factor in a lot of areas. $150 will buy a decent analog radio. The same thing, but digital will cost $300-500. Cheap Chinese radios can be had for as low as $30 or so. With just 100 radios saving $200 each, you get 20k to spend on other things. That matters a lot to rural police and even more to EMS (especially volunteer groups).

    • dmkolobov 1395 days ago
      Completely outside of my area of expertise, so this may be a silly question, but are police transmissions distinguishable from others in their encrypted form? If so, there could still be a use case for knowing _where_ the cops are. Wonder if some sort of mesh could be used to triangulate the positions of these signals.
      • alvern 1395 days ago
        I think the repeaters would block out any of the mobile radios. So you could see the dispatchers easily, but the individual mobile operators (EMS, Fire, Police) would be hard to distinguish.

        If the mesh was every Digital TV tuner inside a municipality, then maybe the mesh could triangulate position.

      • Simulacra 1395 days ago
        Outside of my area as well, but, IIRC Kevin Mitnick wrote about using a radio set to encrypted frequencies. When he was out and about, if he heard traffic on those frequencies, then he knew the FBI etc. must be nearby.
      • ryanlol 1395 days ago
        Often they are, yes. It’s relatively easy to use an USRP to generate alerts when someone is using TETRA nearby.

        But sure, other agencies may generate false positivies.

      • oasisbob 1395 days ago
        You could look for the repeater uplink, maybe.

        Keep in mind that these public radio systems are often used by firefighters and other agencies.

        Finding police specifically would probably involve some sort of metadata leak in the radio signaling protocols.

    • cwkoss 1395 days ago
      Does anyone have information about how frequently keys are rotated or exchanged? Seems like keeping 100 radios on the same channel could be hard to do without the potential for human error to leak some data - cops aren't typically very tech savvy.
      • sneak 1394 days ago
        The radios are re-keyed periodically over the air, or at least they can be. Not sure how often it happens in practice.

        There’s also a capability, mandated by the federal interoperability standards (compliance with which federal free money to upgrade local PD radios hinges upon) to zeroize (erase/disable) encryption keys in a radio remotely, for example if one is lost or stolen, to prevent rogue network access.

        Misuse of the rekeying admin keys to remotely disable police radios in bulk is a very interesting DoS, and one that should be noted well by (usually civilian outsourced) police radio maintenance admins presently reading this comment if cops or other users of these encrypted radio systems start being deployed to mass murder civilians.

        As I understand it, the same interoperability protocols also can interrogate the radios for their locations if GPS equipped. (I have not personally read the spec docs yet.) I’d love to see the mashup made of that data, or an oversight organization using it to track criminal cops and parallel construction efforts.

  • sterwill 1395 days ago
    I haven't done the work to sign up at Broadcastify, but if you're in Durham NC and want to listen hit http://home.tinfig.com:9999 with VLC (or mplayer or whatever you like).

    It's an HTTP+Ogg+Opus stream from my BCD536HP. It's scanning the local P25 trunked radio system (Durham police, fire, EMS, ops, etc.).

    P.S. As I write this I'm hearing chatter about responding to an airplane crash... no more details yet.

    • voltagex_ 1395 days ago
      Will you have a chance to write up anything further about your setup?
      • sterwill 1395 days ago
        It's just an old HP Proliant home server with a USB sound dongle, and VLC transcoding from ALSA PCM to Opus and serving HTTP. VLC does it all!

        My radio has a WiFi interface, but it's weird and unreliable (only supports RTSP, 401s if the requested host isn't its internal IP, crashes after 12 hours, etc). So I just use a short analog audio cable instead.

        • sterwill 1394 days ago
          More technical details in case anyone needs to quickly pipe out some audio to the Internet:

            /usr/bin/vlc -I dummy -vv --no-alsa-stereo alsa://default:CARD=Device -L --sout-keep \
              --sout #transcode{acodec=opus,channels=1,ab=24000,afilter=equalizer}:standard{access=http,mux=ogg,dst=:9999} \
              --equalizer-2pass --equalizer-bands 0 0 0 0 0 0 -20 -20 -20 -20
          
          --no-alsa-stereo because my input source is mono. --sout-keep probably isn't necessary now, but it was when I was streaming from the radio's crashy RTSP service.

          The #transcode block sets up a simple pipeline: first transcode to Opus at the specified output bitrate (24 Kbps is plenty for recorded voice), then mux it up and serve it via HTTP. I added a low-pass filter at ~6 KHz because there's some of high frequency noise from either my radio's analog output stage or the cabling. I had to look through the VLC source code[1] to find the preset frequency bands since I couldn't find them in VLC docs.

          [1] https://github.com/videolan/vlc/blob/777f36c15564b076bf13af6...

    • mindcrime 1394 days ago
      tinfig.com, huh? Hmm... this sounds familiar.
  • protomyth 1395 days ago
    I remember as a young kid my family, and a few others, had police scanners. It was fairly interesting and you got a feel for which of your neighbors were trouble. A lot of my relatives were rural fire department volunteers so the scanners were a useful warning before the actual alarm page was sent out. I do remember one of my relatives drove out to pick up a cop on a back road when his cruiser died, or the night they chased a light all over hell and back. The first reality programming.
    • bg4 1395 days ago
      > or the night they chased a light all over hell and back

      Please elaborate.

      • protomyth 1395 days ago
        Well, this is a couple decades ago - so the play-by-play is a bit lost, one cop at a locally infamous speed trap after dark started seeing a light in the woods near the road. He reported it over the radio, and speculated it might be someone spotlighting deer. Hunting deer at night is very, very illegal as the deer freeze when the light is shined at them. He didn't hear shots, but was understandably reluctant to pursue the light by himself as people committing illegal acts that are obviously armed might be unsocial. Another two patrol cars showed up and they decided to surround the area where the light was. The "light", when flushed by the officers, took off down the road. The officers only saw the light and not what is was attached to nor did they hear an engine. This pursuit went from road, to another field, down the side of a river, and back into the wooded area. The light would turn on and off traveled at high speed about four feet off the ground. They finally lost sight of it outside town, last seen headed down the road. Apparently some folks called in sightings (land line days to the dispatcher), but the latency made these a bit unhelpful and the officers did comment that some of the callers might not be trusted observers and some might be ..uhm.. less than perceptive having their head inappropriately situated. The officers did say some words that were not strictly professional and threatened all manner of violence on whoever was behind this. It probably cost them some revenue as they were not available to assure the public's safe speed particularly after the bars closed. They did not catch the light nor did it happen again.
        • wyldfire 1395 days ago
          > Hunting deer at night is very, very illegal as the deer freeze when the light is shined at them.

          Is that really the rationale? I would think risk of accidentally harming humans or property would significantly increase at night.

          • protomyth 1395 days ago
            Its a combination, that's one of the big rationals I've always heard. Also, enforcement of rules would be really painful at night. It probably would be very dangerous to be out there with some of the idiots who think they are hunters.
            • jmm5 1395 days ago
              Same reason you can’t just set up a salt lick in your back yard and camp out.
          • kortilla 1395 days ago
            That and the fact that it would be easier to get away without hunting without a tag since the state game department doesn’t have night patrols.
        • renewiltord 1395 days ago
          Why is the deer freezing a problem? Wouldn't that be desirable? Less likelihood of a missed shot, etc.
          • topspin 1395 days ago
            It's considered unsporting and is a poaching technique. Yes, some game animals will stare into a light not understanding the threat, but the real reason spotlights are effective is eyeshine; the light reflected from the eyes of game animals makes them easy to find at night.

            There are many effective techniques that are not permitted when hunting game.

            • koenigdavidmj 1394 days ago
              Incidentally, the use of radios is unsporting in Kansas, and therefore forbidden (unless you’re hunting coyotes—they’re considered a pest, so you can pretty much do whatever you want).
            • renewiltord 1395 days ago
              Oh I see. I just didn't realize that that was codified into law so that police would stop you from doing that. Would have figured it had more than just unsporting as a reason.
    • Lammy 1395 days ago
      > which of your neighbors were trouble

      Or which of your neighbors the ruling class want to destroy/subjugate, as we have seen recently.

      • kortilla 1395 days ago
        Not usually. I grew up in a generally lower middle class town and most of the police scanner activity of “repeat problem people” were for domestic disturbances or drunken/high fights. Responding to wife beaters isn’t really subjugating anything.
  • Press2forEN 1395 days ago
    With the rise of corporate censorship I don't think its wise to rely on app stores for access to police frequencies. Dedicated radios that monitor police frequencies are widely available and you don't need an amateur license to use one (since you're only listening, not transmitting).

    My city is on 700MHz P25 which requires a fairly pricey radio, but its been worth every penny over the past week. After listening in last Saturday we cancelled a trip to visit family after hearing about a riot on the local highway.

    Make sure to look up the frequency your town uses first before dropping so much coin on a radio. If your local LE is encrypted, you're out of luck. But many aren't.

    • blantonl 1395 days ago
      You don't have to rely on app stores... Broadcastify is the platform that powers all these apps, and they are online at https://www.broadcastify.com
      • Press2forEN 1395 days ago
        Police scanning channels are a good way of gaining information about local political activity in your area.

        I think at some point you'll feel the pressure to censor those feeds as a way to limit information about demonstrations that aren't approved by the ruling class.

    • larrywright 1395 days ago
      Any specific models/manufacturers you can suggest?
      • lozaning 1395 days ago
        Get a Hack RF or other SDR and then just run Unitrunker on a computer.
        • larrywright 1395 days ago
          I have a couple of those, but unitrunker only runs in Windows, and I’d hate to run Windows just for that.
        • xxpor 1395 days ago
          Don't you need at least 2 to track trunked systems?
          • dantle 1395 days ago
            It is helpful, but not necessary. I am listening in on Seattle's trunked radio system with just one, and I get most of the comms.

            I documented my setup here: https://dantler.us/seattle-police-scanner/

          • lozaning 1395 days ago
            You need two rtl-sdr, but one hack-rf can grab enough of the spectrum that only one is required. One of the benefits of p25 is that it's very spectrum efficient so I get all 18 channels.
            • xxpor 1394 days ago
              Ah the bandwidth isn't something I'd considered. That's a good point. Unfortunately for me the KCERS Seattle site's total bandwidth is about 6.5 mhz. I have a RTL-SDR and a SDRPlay but it seems like the only thing that can talk to the SDRPlay is their own software.

              https://www.radioreference.com/apps/db/?sid=604

      • Press2forEN 1395 days ago
        I have a Uniden BCD396XT, which is a few years old and I'm not sure they make it anymore. However the second-hand market for radios is very strong and if you have an amateur radio store in your area (Ham Radio Outlet, or the like) you can go there and I've found them to be very helpful. They're likely to know the specifics of the LE frequencies in your area.

        I've been thinking about upgrading to an ICOM IC-R30, but its expensive and does way more than just police scanning.

  • bzb3 1395 days ago
    How come LE in 2020 is not using encrypted communication systems such as Tetrapol? Yes I know Tetrapol is European, but you get the idea.
    • blantonl 1395 days ago
      Europe and the United State government are drastically different.

      Local municipalities in the United States are very independent and will settle on a a communications system that they locally want to use. Budgets and planning are allocated at those local levels, and power struggles and turf wars will result in agencies right next door to each other using different systems, just because.

    • hkchad 1395 days ago
      They are, in my area they have switched to P25 Trunked and added encryption, at least on the PD channels. The US is a big country and it takes a coordinated effort to upgrade the big city and the surrounding areas and is very expensive. The only thing open around me is Fire/Rescue.
    • mindcrime 1394 days ago
      Why would they? Encrypted LE comms is a horrible idea in the first place. How is the public supposed to monitor what their paid servants are doing, and provide any measure of oversight / demand accountability, if they can't listen to the calls???
    • xxpor 1395 days ago
      Some do, but thankfully most don't. There's really no need. It's a matter of keeping the police transparent. News orgs put up a big stink when they do go encrypted in some places.
    • bluedino 1395 days ago
      Cost? They tried rolling out Tetra in a few places in the USA.
  • VectorLock 1395 days ago
    Although I think a lot of police radios don't use encryption I think the majority are using trunked/digital radios which your garden variety scanner isn't going to be able to decode.
  • sonthonax 1395 days ago
    Wow, I’m really shocked that police still used unencrypted radios.
  • hmmmmm70006 1395 days ago
    Anybody else having issues downloading one these scanner apps from the Apple App Store? I seem to be encountering an error I’ve never seen before...
  • dvno42 1395 days ago
    Look into the p25 standard. I wouldn't know but I wouldn't be surprised it many agencies use it for digital/analog data and can probably be brute forced with cheap hardware. Search for p25 DES-OFB. Now would be a great time for a rainbow table.
    • jlgaddis 1394 days ago
      The same radios often/usually support AES as well, although at an additional cost. That's what one nearby PD uses.
    • jcims 1395 days ago
      Is anyone actually encrypting it?

      I’d rather folks help those that have put tons of effort into the voice demodulation of plaintext channels.

  • mring33621 1395 days ago
    These digitized scanner feeds are interesting, but I worry that they can/will be used for propaganda/misinformation. What's to keep a feed supplier from injecting fake content?
    • kasey_junk 1395 days ago
      You can inject misinformation directly into the radio waves in many jurisdictions.

      In Chicago this weekend someone was spreading a rumor that a caravan of protesters were coming from Indiana such that the police diverted resources to check it out.

  • twox2 1395 days ago
    A while back I bought a baofeng handheld on amazon - it's not ideal as a scanner, but good enough. I've been finding plenty of crazy shit during these protests.
  • vmchale 1395 days ago
    Mostly listening in to news about the looters here (Chicago). Obviously I care about the protesters/rioters but they're not who I need to watch out for.
  • sonthonax 1395 days ago
    Do police really still use unencrypted radios?
    • mindcrime 1394 days ago
      In many (probably "most") jurisdictions, yes. Certainly there are some that are encrypted, and that trend has accelerated at least a little bit over the last few years. But from what I've seen, plenty of LE agencies (in the US anyway) are still in the clear.

      Now, as others have noted, a lot of them have now gone to digital trunked systems (P25, and suchlike) that are more difficult to receive/decode. But that's not "encryption", it's just an annoyance.

    • Cobord 1395 days ago
  • tamaharbor 1395 days ago
    I recall being able to listen to cell phone calls on my scanner (a long time ago). One thing that it taught me was that people are generally very boring.
  • olliej 1395 days ago
    Here's NYPD telling each other to run over and/or shoot the motherfuckers: https://twitter.com/balleralert/status/1267928451287220224
  • trumpoline 1395 days ago
    The US is now worse than belarus or russia, you are going to need a lot more tools than radio scanners to regain freedom from your government! Not long until the army will shoot at you as they did at civilians in pretty every country they went to.

    Press reporters abducted by the police live? Innocent people gassed? Police ramming protesters? Entire races oppressed? Not thats not the soviet union, it’s The United States of America folks.

  • totorovirus 1395 days ago
    Now US doesn't have right to slander china's public surveilance
    • haram_masala 1395 days ago
      Huh? These are private citizens monitoring the police, which is pretty much the opposite of the Chinese surveillance you’re referring to. In fact it’s pretty much an antimetabole (“In the United States, people spy on cops!”).
  • empath75 1395 days ago
    I'm surprised they didn't mention that someone in Chicago seems to have stolen a police radio and has been trolling them for days.
    • callalex 1395 days ago
      Interesting, on any radio enthusiast forum there are countless warnings about how if you do something like this the feds will be knocking on your door almost immediately. I guess that’s just urban legend to discourage lazy bad guys?
    • swebs 1395 days ago
      I'm pretty sure any $30 Baofeng will let you broadcast on these frequencies.
      • oasisbob 1395 days ago
        Any trunked radio system hops between frequencies enough that this wouldn't work.

        Individual radios get "paged" on a control channel and told where to receive. Eg, "Radios tuned to the police talk group, go to frequency X now." The speaker, when transmitting, gets assigned a frequency on the fly.

        A baofeng could stomp on a transmission, but nobody would follow it otherwise.

        • blantonl 1395 days ago
          Chicago uses a straight analog repeater system
          • oasisbob 1395 days ago
            Analog repeaters still use trunking protocols.

            Edit: Whoops, I didn't realize CPD still had so many assigned frequencies in-use with just a code to activate. That could be done with a Baofeng.

        • mindcrime 1394 days ago
          True, but not everybody is on trunked systems with channel-hopping. Especially in rural areas, you'll find plenty of systems that are just straight up analog on some VHF or UHF frequency. Generally, if you know the repeater offset and PL tone, you could - in principle - transmit on their system. Now doing so is a pretty Bad Idea for many reasons, but it's definitely technically possible in those places.