Ich wollte ausnahmsweise loben, und dann -- Lachanfall

02. Mai 2024

Gute Nach­rich­ten, ZDF Heu­te hat wie­der einen neu­en unbe­darf­ten Mode­ra­tor - und natür­lich wie­der den Chef-Propagandisten der Münch­ner Sicher­heits­kon­fe­renz, Nico Lan­ge im Angebot:

Die Ukrai­ner könn­ten ja bei GPS Signa­len “Fre­quen­cy hop­ping” machen um den rus­si­schen Stör­si­gna­len zu entgehen.”

BWAHHAAHAHHAHHHAHA. Ah… Aha.

Oder Soft­ware­up­dates!”

Ahhh…

Also -

Die Satel­li­ten­si­gna­le der glo­ba­len Satel­li­ten­na­vi­ga­ti­ons­sys­te­me (GNSS) in den Fre­quenz­be­rei­chen 1164 - 1215 MHz, 1215 - 1300 MHz und 1559 - 1610 MHz, wie z. B. NAVSTAR-GPS, GALILEO, GLONASS […]

src: click (bundesnetzagentur.de)

Mei­ne Güte, ob die Rus­sen das schaf­fen wer­den eine Fre­quenz­brei­te von drei mal bei­na­he 100Mhz zu stö­ren?! Ehm. Ja.

Und Fre­quen­cy hop­pen will er!

Also - GPS sen­det Uhr­zeit. Flug­kör­per tri­an­gu­liert im Mil­li­se­kun­den­be­reich. Rake­te hoppt Fre­quenz. Spoo­fing schickt Uhr­zeit als Signal mit 2 Sekun­den Ver­zö­ge­rung als stär­ke­res Signal auf der bekann­ten Fre­quenz - Flug­kör­per kor­ri­giert nach rechts und jetzt?

Moment, Moment ich habs!

GPS sen­det Uhr­zeit. Flug­kör­per tri­an­gu­liert im Mil­li­se­kun­den­be­reich. Stör­sen­der stört Trans­mis­si­on. Rake­te hoppt Fre­quenz. Bekommt kei­ne Uhr­zeit. Flug­kör­per kann nicht kor­ri­gie­ren und fliegt gera­de aus.

Bestechend geni­al. Und gefixt wird natür­lich per Soft­ware Update! Und nach so einem Soft­ware Update kann so ein GPS Emp­fän­ger - die sel­ben Fre­quen­zen emp­fan­gen wie vor­her. Weil Hard­wareli­mi­ta­ti­on. GPS Signa­le sind kei­ne Zwei-Wege-Kommunikation, nicht ver­schlüs­selt, und emi­tie­ren auf bekann­ten Frequenzen.

Jetzt aber - also rich­tig geni­al - die Rake­ten hüp­fen aus dem bekann­ten Fre­quenz­spek­trum her­aus und erhal­ten dann GPS Uhr­zeit Signa­le - über ein ande­res Fre­quenz­spek­trum, für das wir repea­ter über die 300km zum Ziel auf­ge­stellt haben? Oder mit Inter­net Satel­li­ten Uplink Latenz? Nein, jetzt hab ichs aber, über Wifi! Mit 50Meter Genau­ig­keit im Stadt­be­reich! Oder über 5G mit Packet loss! Über Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on von Mobilfunksendemasten!

Der hats ein­fach drauf der Sicher­heits­ex­per­te der Münch­ner Sicherheitskonferenz.

Das ZDF darf wie immer von Pro­fis lernen.

Aber wie macht das eigent­lich die US Armee?

In respon­se to the­se vul­nera­bi­li­ties, the Space For­ce is har­de­ning what it calls the “GPS enter­pri­se” that inclu­des three seg­ments: satel­li­tes in space, the ground con­trol sys­tem and user equip­ment. “We are loo­king at how we will con­ti­nue to evol­ve this archi­tec­tu­re into one that is more robust and resi­li­ent than it is today,” said Col. Ryan Colburn, direc­tor of the spec­trum war­fa­re divi­si­on at the Space and Mis­si­le Sys­tems Center.

DoD uses a num­ber of PNT [Posi­ti­on Navi­ga­ti­on Timing] tech­no­lo­gies to com­ple­ment GPS or to ser­ve as back­up when GPS is degra­ded or unavailable.

Some mili­ta­ry plat­forms use onboard sen­sors to track their posi­ti­on and keep time without the use of an exter­nal signal. Other PNT tech­no­lo­gies use exter­nal sources of infor­ma­ti­on other than GPS to deter­mi­ne the posi­ti­on of a plat­form. Mili­ta­ry com­bat air­craft use GPS pai­red with iner­ti­al navi­ga­ti­on sys­tems so if GPS goes out the pilot can still com­ple­te the mis­si­on. [Yeah, and how do you know when to kick in the iner­tia based sys­tem, when the signal is spoo­fed…] Iner­ti­al sen­sors and clocks allow a plat­form to iden­ti­fy its posi­ti­on and keep track of time without an exter­nal signal like GPS. Other tech­no­lo­gies rely on celesti­al and magne­tic navi­ga­ti­on to deter­mi­ne posi­ti­on. [Marsch­flug­kör­per, schau auf die Ster­ne, schau auf die Ster­ne und schau auf den Mond, dein Leben, ist ein Stre­ben, in die Fer­ne die kei­ner bewohnt…] There’s also a gro­wing num­ber of satel­li­tes in low Earth orbit that trans­mit PNT infor­ma­ti­on. [Ah, the­re is Nico Lan­ges “Soft­ware­up­date”. 😉 ]

None of the­se alter­na­ti­ve PNT tech­no­lo­gies, howe­ver, has redu­ced the U.S. military’s depen­dence on GPS, said the Government Accoun­ta­bi­li­ty Office in a May report.

Alter­na­ti­ve PNT does not appe­ar to be a par­ti­cu­lar­ly high prio­ri­ty for DoD,” said Karen Howard, GAO’s direc­tor of sci­ence, tech­no­lo­gy assess­ment and analytics.

src: click

Ich find ja gut, dass ZDF heu­te immer Exper­ten inter­viewt, und nie Propagandisten. 🙂

edit:

COUNTERMEASURES TO MAINTAIN GPS AND PNT INTEGRITY

The U.S. government has under­ta­ken several signi­fi­cant initia­ti­ves to impro­ve the resi­li­en­ce and relia­bi­li­ty of its GPS-based sys­tems. The foun­da­tio­nal step of the­se efforts is the GPS moder­niz­a­ti­on pro­gram, an ongo­ing, multibillion-dollar effort to upgrade the system’s fea­tures and per­for­mance. Along with new satel­li­tes, the pro­gram inclu­des the deploy­ment of new ground sta­ti­ons. The upgraded infra­st­ruc­tu­re will add navi­ga­ti­on signals for both civi­li­an and mili­ta­ry users and will enhan­ce the system’s accu­ra­cy and availability.

The sys­tem employs M-code, a new mili­ta­ry signal in the L1 and L2 GPS bands [L1, at 1575.42 MHz, and L2, at 1227.6 MHz] that is inten­ded to impro­ve resis­tance to spoo­fing and jamming. In addi­ti­on to a wide-angle anten­na for broad dis­tri­bu­ti­on of the signal, the new satel­li­tes can deli­ver M-code to spe­ci­fic loca­ti­ons via spot beam trans­mis­si­ons. By using high-gain direc­tio­n­al anten­nas to aim the signal at a spe­ci­fic regi­on, the satel­li­tes can crea­te a much more power­ful signal that resists jamming. The M-Code signals also are encryp­ted using the Moder­ni­zed Nav­star Secu­ri­ty Algo­rithm, which enab­les mili­ta­ry GPS recei­vers to detect and reject fal­se signals.

The encryp­ti­on of mili­ta­ry GPS signals pre­vents spoo­fing. Many GPS recei­vers still uti­li­ze the Selec­ti­ve Availability

Anti-Spoofing Modu­le (SAASM) tech­no­lo­gy to address jamming and spoofing.

As the GPS III con­stel­la­ti­on is laun­ched, U.S. for­ces will purcha­se equip­ment com­pa­ti­ble with M-Code signals. But while M-Code pro­vi­des an effec­ti­ve defen­se against spoo­fing, it is still vul­nerable to jamming attacks. Other pos­si­ble mea­su­res to pro­tect GPS-based PNT capa­bi­li­ties inclu­de Inter­fe­rence Detec­tion and Miti­ga­ti­on solu­ti­ons. The­se solu­ti­ons iso­la­te an ano­ma­lous signal that is jamming GPS and repla­ces it. They use dif­fe­rent tools to aug­ment the GPS signal or imple­ment ano­t­her PNT solution.

Ano­t­her opti­on is to out­fit GPS-enabled sys­tems with anti-jam anten­nas. [MOUNT THE DIRECTIONAL ANTENNA ARRAY TO THE CRUISE MISSILE!] The­se anten­nas block RF signals com­ing from near the hori­zon, whe­re jamming signals typi­cal­ly ori­gi­na­te. Ins­tead the antenna’s beam is focu­sed at the zenith, whe­re GPS satel­li­tes are located.

Con­trol­led Recep­ti­on Pat­tern anten­nas, or “smart” anten­nas, can be electri­cal­ly stee­red to focus nar­row beams direct­ly at GPS satel­li­tes, miti­ga­ting the deni­al of GPS signals. Fur­ther, smart anten­nas can track GPS satel­li­tes as they move across the sky. While the­se anten­nas pro­vi­de effec­ti­ve defen­se against jamming, they are lar­ger and more expen­si­ve that stan­dard GPS antennas.

Other tech­no­lo­gies avail­ab­le today inclu­de in-line pro­tec­tion sys­tems. “The­se don’t requi­re us to phy­si­cal­ly chan­ge our anten­na or the GNSS recei­ver that’s down­stream,” Hoh­man says. “This could be very power­ful for app­li­ca­ti­ons whe­re it cos­ts a lot of money to update an anten­na or to update a GPS recei­ver. Ins­tead, you could just stick a device in bet­ween the anten­na and the exis­ting recei­ver and pro­vi­de some level of addi­tio­nal pro­tec­tion. [signal decryp­ti­on, cant use nor­mal GPS for that] That could be a very attrac­ti­ve capa­bi­li­ty for plat­forms that aren’t loo­king to do full reno­va­tions on their system.”

Alter­na­ti­ve navi­ga­ti­on signals offer ano­t­her opti­on to address jamming and spoo­fing attacks. The Satel­li­te Time and Loca­ti­on ser­vice, which was laun­ched in 2016, uses Iri­di­um satel­li­tes in low-earth orbit to pro­vi­de an encryp­ted signal for posi­tio­ning and timing. The signal is 1,000 times stron­ger than GPS, making it more resistant to jamming and spoo­fing, and is accu­ra­te to 30-50 meters. This com­pa­res to an accu­ra­cy for GPS of 30 cen­ti­me­ters. [Ah, the power of laten­cy… 🙂 ] Alt­hough it doesn’t offer the same pre­cisi­on as the Air For­ce satel­li­tes, this ser­vice can pro­vi­de a refe­rence that enab­les the detec­tion of GPS spoo­fing. Fur­ther, it can be employ­ed in com­bi­na­ti­on with other mea­su­re­ments to pro­vi­de navi­ga­ti­on capa­bi­li­ties when GPS is denied.

src: click (safranfederalsystems.com)









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