Oops, didn't see the last post, ignore my most recent.
@Anticrime Thanks for sharing some details!
RF reader spike (cell tower bands) when powering up
Very close proximity, like next to the phone.
This is a $200 home-amateur all-round RF meter but when it says 1914mhz that is pretty accurate.
It's not about my testing equipment, I don't run a lab.
Maybe another reader could verify with pro equipment
But it signals , so powering on your Pixel may give away something?
- Edited
Anticrime My cheap home meter says 1914 MHz and just lasts a fraction of a second.
Described at that level if detail, it could be anything. When a modern device including processors is powered on there are a lot of clocks that need to be spun up, and you could see brief spurious emissions when a clock is running far out of spec. An SoC could easily have several clock domains, and an RF modem could have more than one of its own.
It could well be that turning on phones of different models would result in model-specific spurious emissions that could be fingerprinted. But it is also possible that two different Pixel 6's might emit different spurious signals.
Anticrime Could be the device initializing the modem chip
Check this topic
https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/10470-is-the-imei-broadcast-on-reboot-regardless-of-airplane-mode
It has been speculated before that Imei is being broadcasted at power regardless of airplane mode but threads were locked by mods and no official answer also.
However it seem to be device specific issue and not OS specific issue. So probably nothing can be done about it?
Interesting to see if other devices behaves the same or if it is Pixel hardware specific issue.
JayJay Check this topic
https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/10470-is-the-imei-broadcast-on-reboot-regardless-of-airplane-modeIt has been speculated before that Imei is being broadcasted at power regardless of airplane mode but threads were locked by mods and no official answer also.
I think one of those threads is locked and one isn't.
Regardless, more threads speculating about something doesn't make that thing more likely. What makes something more likely is evidence. Literally thousands of labs have the right kind of equipment to produce evidence (or to look and not find anything). And a quick search suggests that GNU Radio has LTE receiver support, in which case a lab full of equipment may not be necessary.
The same freq is hit only on the Pixel device, not on other devices
Someone looking into this sniffing the protocol with better equipment would be an idea , but unfortunately I don't have the skill or equipment for deeper research
I'll leave it here maybe for someone else interested in the subject
I’m sure many folks could pick this up.
The problem is that they may not read this discussion, and if they do, they may not choose to comment.
(I’m not sure I would)
Some more eyes on this would already be helpful
A description of the signal characteristics would be interesting, but I’m not holding my breath.