Scientists succeed in spoofing GPS signals

Good luck blaming those speeding tickest on GPS spoofing now
Good luck blaming those speeding tickest on GPS spoofing now

Here's a story to send a shiver down the spine of anyone who relies on their GPS sat nav or mobile. Scientists at Cornell University have managed to trick a GPS receiver into accepting signals from rogue transmitters instead of the genuine orbiting satellites.

It took a year of electronic tinkering, but boffins today demonstrated how a phony receiver could be placed near a navigation device, where it would track, modify, and retransmit the signals from the GPS satellite constellation. Gradually, the victim navigation device would accept the counterfeit navigation signals.

Mark Harris is Senior Research Director at Gartner.