phy1729/rayhunter — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-17 · repo last pushed 2026-02-15
Run it on a mobile hotspot while reporting in the field to get alerted if a stingray is active nearby.
Use it at protests or organizing events to detect potential cellular surveillance targeting attendees.
Carry it as a personal privacy tool to monitor for fake cell towers in your daily environment.
| phy1729/rayhunter | 0verflowme/alarm-clock | 0xhassaan/nn-from-scratch | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | — | — | 0 |
| Language | — | CSS | Python |
| Last pushed | 2026-02-15 | 2022-10-03 | — |
| Maintenance | Maintained | Dormant | — |
| Setup difficulty | easy | easy | moderate |
| Complexity | 2/5 | 2/5 | 4/5 |
| Audience | general | vibe coder | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Requires an Orbic RC400L mobile hotspot or a community-supported device to run.
Rayhunter is a tool that helps you detect when someone is using a cell-site simulator, also known as a "stingray," to spy on your phone's cellular activity. These are devices that pretend to be legitimate cell towers to trick your phone into connecting to them, allowing whoever operates the device to monitor your location, calls, and data. It runs on an affordable mobile hotspot called the Orbic RC400L, and community contributions have expanded support to some other devices as well. The project is designed to be straightforward to install and use, regardless of your technical background. It focuses on minimizing false positives, meaning it aims to alert you only when there is a genuine reason to suspect surveillance rather than crying wolf at normal network activity. This would be useful for journalists, activists, organizers, or anyone concerned they may be targeted by surveillance tools that mimic cell towers. For example, a reporter covering a sensitive story could run this on a personal hotspot to get early warning if a stingray is active in the area. The tool was built by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a digital rights organization, which gives it credibility as a privacy-focused project. The README does not go into technical detail on how the detection actually works under the hood, but it links to a broader guide and an introductory blog post for those who want to understand the mechanism and the broader landscape of cellular surveillance. It also includes a legal disclaimer noting that while the EFF believes running the tool does not violate US laws, users outside the US should consult a local attorney to assess any legal risk.
Rayhunter detects cell-site simulators (stingrays) that pretend to be cell towers to spy on your phone. It runs on an affordable mobile hotspot and warns you when surveillance is likely active nearby.
Maintained — commit in last 6 months (last push 2026-02-15).
The license is not specified in the explanation.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
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