Like I said, short range jammers. The kind of short range that won't extend past your property line. You could file a complaint with the local government if someone's jammer extends past that point and they won't readjust it.
Because it'd be really easy to tell whose jammer is stopping you from using basic every objects, right? It's not like in, say, a suburban area there'd be potentially dozens of people with jammers, any of whom could have deliberately or accidentally made theirs too big for their area. Filing a complaint would involve them having to investigate and carefully test EVERYBODY's jammer (since they're pretty easy to make yourself or modify you wouldn't be able to just trust the label) in the area rather than just finding the person with the jammer like they could at the moment. I feel like if you lived in a block with paranoid neighbours you could pretty much say goodbye to the prospect of listening to the radio or using a mobile phone or using wireless internet ever again.
Yeaaah... america being america, I'd just kinda' note that just about everything that's being said for/against short-range jamming devices (so far) can be applied pretty directly in relation to firearms.
You know what? No, this is completely different from guns.
In a magical world where noone would "abuse" firearms, then yes, they wouldn't really cause any problems.
In a magicial world where noone would abuse jammers they would
still cause huge problems (and this is ignoring the fact that there is also massive potential for abuse). It'd be very easy to accidentally overreach your area slightly and knock out your neighbours' appliances. The idea of pointing your jamming signals upwards to prevent drones (as MSH seems to be suggesting) would also cause horrible problems for civilian aircraft, especially in areas where planes take off and land. There's also minor things like accidentally straying onto someone's expansive property and not being able to get off since they fucked up your GPS signals (which would also be an issue if emergency services ever had to cross your land... or do you have the right to deny someone on your land medical treatment/ police services? Not that they'd be able to call them in since you blocked their mobile phone call).
Can we go back to the start of this argument for a second? MSH mentioned drones as well. That seems to me a even bigger deal then this jammer thing. I mean. Should a citizen be able to control a remote control killing/Spying device?
Am I missing something here?
Spying is only bad if the government's doing it, I guess.