I see nothing wrong with that policy. Sometimes people just need to create something to complain about.
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now Steve, that would never happen on ScubaBoard

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I see nothing wrong with that policy. Sometimes people just need to create something to complain about.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk.......figure it out
I'm not sure about NJ, but many reefs and wrecks in California show up on Google Earth exactly where they are at. I've used it many times to find high spots on several sites.
This is the Star of Scotland wreck near Santa Monica.
http://www.scubaboard.com/gallery/data/1064/GoogleEarth_Image_1_.jpg
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Well then I'd not take the gps receiver. Just my phone to take pictures. With gps positioning enabled. Each photo would have the coordinates. If a crew member threatened me with destruction of my property the first thing I'd do is notify the local authorities. Then I'd post their ops name and theirs here and on my facebook page and what they said. You're over a dive site open to anyone with access. Not a treasure site with a legitimate claim.
There's the important distinction. The OP was not made aware of such a policy. Very few would argue in favor of flouting explicit boat policies. I have yet to board a boat that made such a policy explicit, but most of my wreck diving was done in the LORAN days.If you were aboard my vessel, and used a gps after I made it clear no such device was allowed, I would toss it in the ocean and you never again board vessel. I make that clear in advance to all passengers on the few occasions when it is appropriate.
GPS jamming, and jamming devices, are illegal in the United States. Serial offenders will face serious consequences.GPS is not one of the battles I'd find worth fighting with the crew of a boat I was on. Their boat, their rules, and I'm sure there are much more worthy topics of debate (how they deal with your gear, safety issues, closing off the head at the site).
Whether it's a secret site or not, or if they think they can detect all the phones, cameras or almond-sized standalone GPS receiving units brought on by clients and prevent dissemination of numbers, this practice will quickly become nothing more than a historical oddity, simply by the steady march of technology.
The boats who are really serial about it will install radio jammers or broadcast false numbers so all your readings point to downtown Topeka Kansas, at which point they shouldn't care if you're packing a GPS.