Can laptops and cellphones be remotely detonated?

Is there someone who could blow up your laptop, phone, or other device?
 Is there someone who could blow up your laptop, phone, or other device?

Can laptops and cellphones be remotely detonated?


There have been about 4,500 injuries in Lebanon as a result of communication device explosions. On September 17, pager devices belonging to Hezbollah members were the first to blow up. The next day saw further explosions, but this time they involved walkie-talkies, computers, radios, cellphones, fingerprinting equipment, and solar-powered devices in addition to pagers.


The use of remote detonation of communication devices was not unique to Israel. In reality, Pentagon records from half a century ago describe just such equipment. In the past, Israel's military activities employed communication devices that detonated remotely. For instance, Yahya Ayyash, a prominent figure in the Hamas movement, was given a phone that had an explosive hidden inside of it.


The explosives from the latest batch that went off in Lebanon

One element unites this and other cases: explosives were pre-installed in the devices that blew up in Lebanon on September 17 and 18.


The pagers that burst were part of a recent shipment that arrived in Lebanon almost half a year ago. The gadgets were acquired subsequent to the Hezbollah leader's directive to refrain from using smartphones, as per the sources cited by Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, and other media outlets. Extremely significant injuries resulted from the pager attack. Former CIA employee Edward Snowden stated on X that fewer serious injuries and fires would occur if the cause was overheated batteries.



According to the Arabic broadcaster Al-Mayadeen, airport or customs scanners were unable to find the explosives that had been placed inside the devices. Furthermore, the explosive was created especially for the task.


Could a lithium-ion battery burst on its own?

According to physicist Alexander Shirokorad, the majority of communication device explosions that did not include explosives are linked to the batteries' malfunction or age. These explosions are usually not harmful. Any equipment has the potential to overheat and catch fire, even big household appliances like microwaves and refrigerators.


"A lithium battery has the potential to explode if a hacker can create a short circuit, but only under certain circumstances. Without explosives, a battery fire is unpleasant, but it is unlikely to result in fatalities, according to Alexander Shirokorad.


The potential for mobile devices to explode is not the hazard associated with them. It has to do with their capacity to bug users, tracking their whereabouts and whatever data they might send over their phones.


Contemporary smartphones are designed to prevent self-explosion.

Leading expert at Mobile Research Group Eldar Murtazin claims that current devices, such as iPhones and Android smartphones, have extremely dependable batteries. The likelihood of such devices exploding on their own is extremely low.


"There are numerous safety features built into cell phone batteries, such as temperature sensors and materials designed to keep them from igniting. Thus, the conclusion is that—at least with a typical battery used by the manufacturer—it is nearly difficult to blow up a phone or tablet," Eldar Murtazin stated.


One should buy mobile devices from reliable vendors and provide them to licensed repair services to avoid a situation like the one that occurred in Lebanon.


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