It seems to me that Sacraments & blessings always have to happen in one physical “space”, the area of which is determined by context and not by the actual size/distance and barriers.
For example, it wouldn't make a lot of sense for a priest to give a blessing to a person in a neighbouring house from his presbytery just 15 metres away, even if the person is receptive (assuming there are no preventions for the priest to go there - it's not a high-security prison, locked-down elderly home etc.) The context is they are in two separate houses, two separate spaces. However, a priest or a bishop can obviously bless all 3000 Mass attendees at once at a congress, even if some of them are physically 150 metres away. They are all in the same space.
If your church is small and you have to stand outside to assist at Mass, you'd obviously fulfill your Sunday obligations and receive the graces of the Mass, even though you're not technically in the church.
I remember a similar topic came up during one of Fr. (now Bp.) Morgan's online catechisms. If I remember correctly, he said that during lockdowns, a good idea to go around the rules might be to have Confessions at a grocery store parking lot, with the confessor sits in his car, and the penitent sits in his/her own and parks next to or near the priest, confessing over the phone to him. This way, they'd be in the same space and aware of each other, and being prevented to speak face-to-face, the phone serves as a communication aid.
The Church allows those with disabilities and to use hearing aids, writing etc in Penance, and priests who don't understand the language of his penitents use a sheet where penitents tick their sins and write down a number.
So I don't think the issue is the phone itself, but whether or not the priest and the penitent are within the same “space” more or less, as much as they are not prevented to be.