I have a pair of Bluetooth headphones, which I have been using since 2022. Today, I was sitting on the bus when some random person connected to them and started playing Free Bird.
It was a bit funny, but I don’t want this to become a regular thing. Is there a way of locking the headphones to certain Bluetooth addresses? Or a way of making it not show up automatically on phones (similar to a hidden WiFi network)?
The headphones in question are the JBL Tune 510, which have a USB-C port. However, I don’t know if this can be used to flash firmware.
If there’s already a comment telling me to “just use wired” or something, please don’t tell me again. It’s the best solution, but my phone doesn’t have a headphone jack (fuck you, Apple).
Thanks!
- In my personal experience, every pair of headphones is different, but generally they won’t allow you to connect to a new device unless you intentionally enter a specific mode that broadcasts its availability. Otherwise, turning the device on alone usually causes it to enter a more “locked” mode where it only allows connections with devices it’s already seen. - Hopefully you just tapped the wrong button. Otherwise, you’re right that this could be a huge security issue. A Bluetooth tool emulating a keyboard alone could do some serious damage if devices just accept it. - Yeah, I think they go into discovery mode until they find a previously-paired device when you turn them on. - I’ll double-check the manual. 
 
- Clearly the universe decided you needed to listen to Freebird lol 
- It’s the best solution, but my phone doesn’t have a headphone jack (fuck you, Apple). - You can buy a tiny DAC that plugs into the digital port of the phone. 
- I think it depends on headphone model/setup. - My Sennheiser Momentum 3 by default only look for devices that were paired up in the past. - It goes to (forced) discovery/pairing mode only when I press a specific button on headset manually. - Check manual of your headset for similar setup. 
- Is it at all common for BT headphones to be able to pair without specifically enabling pairing mode? I’ve never heard of that before. - Most headphones require you to hold down the power button when powering on to enable pairing. 




