GNSS Jamming and Spoofing Are a Daily Occurrence - EE|Times
Dana A. Goward, FRIN
President, Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation
What's New: More validation of "the new normal." The article has some interesting quotes from Gustavo Lopez at Septrino.
Why It's Important: We hope this helps the idea that we can't over-rely on GNSS the way we have been "sink in" for policy makers.
What Else to Know:
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GNSS Jamming and Spoofing Are a Daily Occurrence
?October 18, 2024?Robert Huntley
Our society increasingly relies on satellites high above us. We use them for a myriad of applications, from communication to monitoring the state of planet Earth and forecasting the weather. We use global navigation satellite systems (GNSS), such as GPS, Galileo and BeiDou, for journey planning, whether in a vehicle or hiking a mountain trail. Constellations of GNSS satellites provide three crucial functions: positioning, navigation and timing (PNT).
Recent conflicts worldwide have highlighted how?vulnerable?the weak GNSS signals from satellites are to jamming and spoofing. When the U.S. Department of Defense first implemented GPS in the early 1980s, nobody could foresee when $10 GNSS jammers would be widely available or relatively low-cost units could trick GNSS receivers into believing they were in a different location.
On it!
Galxyz LLC Co-Founder CEO
1 个月Dan Hawk Ronald Keen
Navigation, Radar and Broadcast systems
1 个月It is only time before it gets to this part of the world (US and Canada) maybe then we will able to test terrestrial PNT systems.