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Snowden designed an iPhone case: Guess what it does

The NSA whistleblower is presenting a new gadget at the MIT Media Lab that'll keep your iPhone from spying on you.

David Priest Former editor
David Priest is an award-winning writer and editor who formerly covered home security for CNET.
David Priest
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Edward Snowden has designed a phone case to keep the government (and hackers) from spying on you.

Barton Gellman, Getty Images

Edward Snowden and noted hacker Andrew "Bunnie" Huang plan to present a design for a new personal security device at the MIT Media Lab on Thursday. According to Wired, the device is a case-like gadget that "wires into your iPhone's guts to monitor the electrical signals sent to its internal antennas."

The goal of Snowden and Huang's new device is to constantly check if someone -- whether it be the government or a private hacker -- is receiving information from your phone's radios. It does this by snaking wires through the SIM card port (the card itself will be moved to a new slot on the case) and monitoring the iPhone hardware for indicators of unwanted transmissions. While a feature like "airplane mode" does stop your phone from transmitting signals, Snowden says it is far less reliable than monitoring the hardware.

Snowden and Huang have yet to build a prototype, but they are presenting a detailed design on Thursday. How long it will be until users can get their hands on a product remains to be seen.

Watch this: Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who helped Snowden expose the NSA