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February 13, 2013

New technologies deployed to counter the threat of GPS jamming

The first profile of the perpetrators of GPS jamming on British roads will be presented today alongside research results that confirm it is these small device, available online for as little as £30, rather extreme solar weather, which poses the greatest threat to navigation and timing signals in the UK.

Presenters at GNSS Vulnerabilities 2013: Countering the Threat, held at the UK's National Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Laboratory, will also demonstrate a series of new technologies including intelligent receivers and radio-based backups that will protect against the impact of these jammers.

Bob Cockshott, Director of Position, Navigation and Timing at the ICT Network and organiser of the conference says: "Our more complete understanding of the risks posed to GNSS systems is bringing forward new mitigation technologies and approaches. There is no one solution that fits all. Instead we need to combine the right protection and back-up technologies with legal reforms which punish the ownership and use of these jammers, and finally advise government and industry on new commercial and civil policies that will reduce the incentive to jam in the first place."

Understanding the threat

The latest figures on GPS jammer use on British roads comes from the Technology Strategy Board funded SENTINEL Project and its new suite of detectors which includes one deployed close to a busy airport that has been logging as many as 10 interference events per day. Concerns have been raised in the past around the potential impact of jamming on systems and aviation landing technology.

This data also provides a profile of the likely sources of this jamming. The interference profile with marked peaks during the week and a dearth of hits at the weekend strongly indicate it is human activity which is the primary cause rather than natural sources of interference such as the effects of . More specifically, marked peaks during the times of rush hour traffic suggest the main users of jammers are commercial drivers of company vehicles rather than organised criminal gangs who have been caught with jammers in lorry hijackings.

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Charles Curry, founder of Chronos Technology, and a leader of the project says: Over the past four months our sensors near this airport have detected nearly 100 events on Mondays, but this falls to less than 30 on a Sunday. The pattern of behaviour suggests it is likely to be civilian sourced jamming and most likely the evasion of tracking within commercial vehicles for moonlighting activities or for other non-work purposes. More broadly we are also seeing an overall increase in interference incidence which is worrying at a time when GPS is being thrust upon people more and more with GPS tracked car insurances, company vehicle tracking, criminal tagging or asset tracking. The SENTINEL project can now quickly deploy small test networks to organisations with critical infrastructure dependent on GPS signals so they can quantify the problem for themselves and take the appropriate action to counter the threat."

The danger of these jammers is confirmed by new results presented today from the STAVOG project, which developed state of art interference simulations using Spirent, a UK based simulator manufacturer. These mimic the various threats to GNSS signal covering both extreme solar weather and the latest illegal jamming devices available online. In partnership with the General Lighthouse Authorities, STAVOG then tested these interference simulations on a variety of marine grade receivers used in most big commercial shipping vessels and found:

Dr. Chaz Dixon, Project Manager of STAVOG says: "The results from the simulated solar storms were unexpectedly dull. Concerns over the impact of space weather on the most precise use of GPS such as offshore oil operations are legitimate, but our testing proved that modern receivers cope remarkably well with even high levels of disturbance. Instead the real danger seems to come from illegal jammers which other studies have shown are increasingly common. Even the cheapest ones available online can cause complete outages of the receiver signal. It is in anticipation of this threat that we will be making this service available for any GPS users to understand and protect themselves against the vulnerabilities in their positioning and timing systems."

Mitigation technologies

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