The crime of mobbing like nasty neighborhood watch captains and criminal speculators do it here in northeast Seattle, is an example of the use of network technologies—from infrastructure and physical media to the application layer—for evil.
Evil is not a word I like to use. But at the moment I don’t feel well and can’t find other words for being battered in my home yesterday evening and through the night with what appears to be high volumes of radio frequency (RF) interference laced with the “noisy” devices the mobbers use to pelt me with audible harassment. These devices seem to range from “smart” speakers to wireless Bluetooth transmitters, walkie talkies, and dash-cams. Anything with a radio will do; devices with high video frame rates too.
So before I finally get some coffee and get back to writing about mobbing with infrastructure and interference, this partial screenshot provides some insight into what my evening was like last night.

The screenshot shows part of a window from the MetaGeek Chanalyzer application. The mobbed Roku and 2.4G network in this screenshot are the targets of a number of hostile network extenders or range extenders that essentially dump harmful RF interference into the environment of the mobbing victim, damaging her devices and exposing her to dangerous levels of radiation. Such a configuration is not necessarily deliberate, but this one is. In northeast Seattle, mobbing is criminal harassment in which victims are harassed with verbal abuse and other audible noise transmitted by, but not limited to, radio-frequency devices or “interferers.”
There’s more to it and I hope that the right people are looking at the data I’ve been collecting. I also hope they understand that every day this continues is another day I pay the price for standing alone with my human and civil rights.
Women should not be prosecuted and maligned as delusional when they report IoT and other tech-enabled crime (The New York Times on the digital tools of abuse). It’s because the lies of the perpetrators were believed over my truthful reports that those involved freely batter me in my home. No one should have to go through what I have lived as a single woman and legal tenant in this northeast neighborhood of Seattle.
Chanalyzer is a spectrum analyzer that is not limited to the 2.4G and 5G WiFi bands. This could make it especially useful for mobbing and IoT crimes that extend beyond a malicious executable and are better understood within the context of a configuration in the physical world. MetaGeek makes a number of tools that appear to be well-suited to visualizing and understanding mobbing. MetaGeek’s Eye P.A., for example, might be especially useful for understanding mobbing configurations and attacks.
Applications like Chanalyzer give us a chance to use network tools and technologies to combat “evil.” This is an example of the use of network tools for good. And I don’t mind giving MetaGeek a plug—their 50% off pandemic sale on numerous MetaGeek tools will soon come to an end so it’s a good time to buy. For more information, check out their website at https://www.metageek.com/.
Now for that cup of coffee.

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