DIY Privacy Hardware That Actually Solves Something

Key points

  • Simple physical tools beat most flashy “anti-spy” junk.
  • Faraday pouches, camera covers, and charge-only adapters fix narrow but real problems.
  • Test every piece of gear yourself.

Privacy hardware changes the physical result. A pouch blocks radios. A cover blocks optics. A data blocker cuts USB data pins. A flashlight can catch a lens reflection. None of this is magic. It just works when the tool is real.

Keep the process simple. Define the threat. Buy or build the smallest tool that changes it. Then test it. If you skip the test, you bought reassurance, not capability.

Tested Faraday pouch
Best phone isolation tool
Blocks radios when shielding is intact
Physical cover
Best cheap camera defense
Opaque barrier beats software trust
Data exposure
USB charging risk
Charge-only adapters reduce port risk
False positives
Detector weakness
Cheap RF tools are limited
1
Faraday pouches help if they are real. Good ones block cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, and often GPS. Bad ones leak through seams, closures, or worn fabric. Test with your own phone. Try calls, texts, Bluetooth discovery, and Wi-Fi while the pouch is fully sealed.
2
Camera blockers are cheap and effective. A thin sliding cover, small shutter, or opaque tape stops casual camera access. Avoid thick covers that can damage laptop screens. On phones, a lens cover blocks only that lens. The mic and radios still work.
$Simple kit, high payoff
Verified Faraday pouch for your phone and bands.
Thin webcam cover or opaque tape.
USB data blocker or charge-only cable.
Bright flashlight, small mirror, and a basic RF detector.
3
USB data blockers fix one travel problem. A charge-only adapter removes the USB data path, which cuts risk from hostile charging ports. It is not a universal defense. It is just cheap and useful. Better yet, carry your own wall charger.
4
Detection tools help screen, not prove. Handheld RF detectors, lens finders, and thermal tools can narrow a search. Cheap units also light up on normal electronics and may miss passive or intermittent devices. Learn what yours does around known sources before you trust it.
5
Habit beats hardware. Put devices in pouches before the meeting. Keep webcams covered by default. Skip public charging ports. Sweep unfamiliar rooms with a flashlight before you unpack. Gear in a drawer is theater.

Useful references include EFF at https://www.eff.org, FCC guidance at https://www.fcc.gov, and manufacturer testing notes for shielding products. Build the smallest kit that solves a real problem. Skip the rest.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Faraday pouches really work?

Some do. Some fail. A real pouch blocks cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS, and you need to retest it because seams and fabric wear out.

Are webcam covers safe?

Thin covers or opaque tape work. Thick covers can crack some laptop screens when you close them.

Can cheap RF detectors find every bug?

No. They throw false positives and often miss passive or intermittent devices.

What should I buy first?

Start with a tested Faraday pouch, a webcam cover, charge-only USB habits, and a small inspection kit with a flashlight and mirror.