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Could Wall Street & United Airlines Computer Glitches Been Caused By One Small $30 Device?

Friday, July 10, 2015 22:52
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(Before It's News)


NYSE, United Airlines, Wall Street Journal all suffer outages: Coincidence?

The series of outages caused confusion, travel delays, and may have exacerbated trading woes, but officials insist that none are cause for alarm.

REALLY?

United flights resumed nationwide after an hour. Someone with direct knowledge of the United Airlines situation told CNN its employees have investigated the computer glitch and determined the company wasn’t attacked.

“This was not the work of hackers at all,” that person said. “There was no hacking whatsoever, and there is no evidence of any connection to what is happening at the NYSE.”

The NYSE, which went back online after four hours, also assured the public that hackers weren’t behind the shutdown.

“The issue we are experiencing is an internal technical issue and is not the result of a cyber breach,” the NYSE tweeted. “We chose to suspend trading on NYSE to avoid problems arising from our technical issue.”

NOT HACKING BUT WHAT ABOUT JAMMING?

The $30 GPS jammer that could paralyze U.S. cities

By The Week Staff    Originally published March 10, 2011
GPS systems aren’t not just for cars; they make society run, from the military systems to ATMs. But a $30 device could be all that’s needed to sabotage the system.

Our society relies on the “invisible utility” known as GPS, says David Hambling at the New Scientist. Cell phones, ATMs, in-car navigation systems — they all rely on satellite signals. If they were suddenly jammed, chaos could ensue. But what would it take to jam GPS signals? Roughly $30. Here, an instant guide:

How exactly does GPS work?
A global positioning system (GPS) receiver gets signals from at least four orbiting satellites, allowing it to calculate its exact location. The dominant provider of satellite signals is the U.S. military, whose NavStar network has at least 24 satellites operating at any given time.

How easy is it to disrupt a GPS signal?
Very easy. GPS signals are extremely weak — after all, they’re coming from around 12,000 miles away — so it doesn’t take a lot of energy to disrupt them. David Last, a navigation consultant, managed to jam the network of a 500-ton ship using a homemade device. When he switched it on, the ship went “haywire,” reports The New Scientist. Its navigation, radar, and communications systems all went down in a matter of minutes.

But that is just a ship. How could it disrupt a U.S. city?
A powerful enough jammer — or a number of strategically-placed smaller jammers — could disrupt GPS signals across an entire city. The threat is serious enough to have provoked a warning from NASA. A “multiple agency approach must be urgently developed and executed” to counteract the “alarming” rise in availability of GPS jammers, it warned in a paper last year. The threat to our national security could be “devastating.”

How do these jammers work?
They broadcast a strong signal on the same frequency as the satellites, effectively drowning out the GPS signal. The simplest models plug into a cigarette lighter, and can prevent all GPS reception within a 10-mile radius. And some cost as little as $30 online.

So my Garmin would not work. Is that really a big deal?
Actually, your in-car navigation system is one of the least critical networks that would be disrupted by a GPS jammer. Cell phone towers, power grids, and aircraft landing and traffic control systems could all be rendered useless by GPS jammers, as could bank machines and stock exchanges.

Has that kind of disruption happened yet?
Yes. A truck driver who used a small GPS jammer to avoid paying the New Jersey Turnpike toll inadvertently brought down Newark International Liberty Airport’s GPS-based landing system once or twice a day for several months, simply by driving past it on his way to and from work. If it’s that easy, says Emily Esfahani Smith at The Blaze, just “imagine a terrorist getting his hands on one of these.”

Could a terrorist really use GPS jammers to disrupt a city?
Yes, says David Derbyshire at Britain’s Daily Mail. A “single terrorist” armed with equipment costing less than $1,000 could “block the GPS signal over London and leave banks, emergency services, power plants and airports in chaos.” Uh, hang on a second, says British cybersecurity expert Peter Sommer, as quoted in The Wall Street Journal. It would actually take unprecedented mastery of GPS technology to bring such “apocalyptic visions of a cyber-hell” to life. The idea that it would be easy for terrorists to cause “long-term, large scale disruption” is “entirely fanciful.”

What do the experts want to do about it?
NASA wants the government to declare GPS “critical infrastructure,” which would expand and strengthen defense of the satellite networks. It also advises building a back-up satellite system. Experts in Britain have advised banning the import and possession of GPS jamming devices, and using alternative technology, such as a low-frequency radio system, as a back-up to GPS. 

Sources: NASA, New Scientist, Wall St. Journal, Daily Mail, The Blaze

Watch a GPS jammer at work below. You’ll see that the once the jammer is plugged in, the six satellite fixes on the screen go dead.


Another Demonstration:


More about GPS:

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