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Yeah, the guy was clever but clearly cheating and he deserves to be fired. Now, about that reporter:

> Aluminum is not a great conductor—it heats up when a lot of power is pushed through it—so a snack bag would potentially melt if it was used to try to block a strong radio signal from inside.

Uh... what? I mean, I guess, if you're operating a tracking radar or long distance microwave transmitter inside that snack bag, sure. But a LTE radio with a GPS? Are you serious?




The guy wasn't so clever, because regularly missing location data fosters suspicion. About the reporter, I was also struck by the technical cluelessness. For example, there's no need to ground Faraday cages.


Aren't power lines aluminium?


Indeed, they often consist of aluminium for conductivity and steel for stability.


that, and i think the reporter is conflating two similar sounding things he learned in science class: conductivity (electricity) and radio waves (electromagnetic waves).




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