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A Chinese retailer is facing a $34.9 million fine for selling signal jammers

It has been said many times that a company is able to say what it likes within the confines of law, but where there is no law to regulate a particular viewpoint, customers who think that a company has gone overboard with a particular way of doing or seeing things do have the power to hit said company where it hurts the most – their pockets. This works most of the time, and it is the way that companies or organizations have been “punished” before. The FCC recently slapped a close to $35 million fine on C.T.S. Technology Co. Ltd. because they have been selling signal jammers to folks living in the U.S., where among their customers include “undercover operators”.

Chinese electronics maker C.T.S. Technology Co Ltd will face the largest fine in the U.S. Federal Communications Commission’s history, of $34.9 million, for marketing illegal devices that block phone calls and other radio signals, the FCC said on Thursday. U.S. law prohibits using, selling or marketing devices that block, jam or interfere with authorized radio signals such as telephone calls, GPS systems, Wi-Fi networks or first-responder communications. U.S. regulators accuse C.T.S. of marketing 285 models of signal jamming devices to U.S. consumers on its website for more than two years, falsely claiming that certain jammers they were selling were actually approved by the FCC. The Chinese company sold 10 high-powered signal jammers to undercover FCC personal, the agency said. The FCC now plans to fine C.T.S. the maximum amount for each jammer model it allegedly marketed and request information about anyone who purchased C.T.S. jammer devices in the United States. C.T.S. did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. The use of signal “jammers” is allowed in the United States only in limited situations by federal law enforcement officials.

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Written by Michio Hasai

Michio Hasai is a social strategist and car guy. Find him on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

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