Unfortunately that is a typical "internet schematic" by someone who does not understand electronics.
It's sad that there are lots of examples that just do not work as claimed and can totally mislead beginners.
The CA3130 opamp is not suitable for radio frequencies and its gain drops to zero at a few MHz - while mobile phones operate at 800-900 MHz and higher frequency bands.
The only reason it does anything is when the RF signal is strong enough some semiconductor junctions start directly rectifying it and upsetting the bias...
Also note that for anything to work properly at the frequencies involved, all construction is extremely critical and breadboard circuits will not work at all, or at least not as expected; connection lengths are critical, as are stray capacitance and inductance. Each piece of wire or connection has delay and resonance effects at 900MHz like a piece a hundred times longer at "shortwave" type frequencies, or a million times longer than at audio frequencies.
For info:
Prototyping for UHF frequencies needs to be done on ground-plane boards, either etched / milled "stripline" tracks or "Manhattan" or "dead bug" style, as the examples below.
Stripline examples:
Manhattan style - small pads of PCB on top of a copper ground plane board.
And an article on "dead bug" style:
A revived technique lets you make microwave and high-speed digital circuits without a traditional printed circuit board