From: “P. J. Ponder” <ponder@freenet.tlh.fl.us>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: ca7620dd3e920f08a4ba83e7d51bfb1301f6f252654f218400839c49238f2015
Message ID: <Pine.OSF.3.91.960929210222.31190B-100000@fn3.freenet.tlh.fl.us>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-09-30 03:35:12 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 30 Sep 1996 11:35:12 +0800
From: "P. J. Ponder" <ponder@freenet.tlh.fl.us>
Date: Mon, 30 Sep 1996 11:35:12 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: GPS [MARGINAL, at best]
Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.91.960929210222.31190B-100000@fn3.freenet.tlh.fl.us>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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There was an article in _Scientific American_ February 1996 about GPS. I
couldn't find the magazine, but they had this squib on the www.sciam.com
website:
'The Global Positioning System'
Thomas A. Herring
Two dozen satellites hovering thousands of miles up can locate your
position on the earth's surface to within a few centimeters.
Originally constructed for military applications, this network of
space beacons today finds civilian applications--such as landing
airplanes in fog--that demand accuracy beyond what its designers had
thought would be technically possible.
According to the website, there was also a letter in the June 1996 issue
responding to Herring's article. Here it is:
MILITARY ADVANTAGE
I was pleased when I first saw your February article "The Global
Positioning System," by Thomas A. Herring. As developers and operators
of GPS, we in the Department of Defense and our partners in industry
are justifiably proud of the technology. GPS represents the best of
American scientific and technical ingenuity as well as being an
excellent example of cooperation between the military and civilian
sectors. But after reading the entire article, I was disappointed by
its unbalanced discussion of the national security aspects of GPS.
Yes, the Defense Department does operate GPS with unpopular security
features. But these features were not designed to inconvenience the
peaceful users of the system, as Herring implies. Rather they were
designed to provide U.S. and allied forces with a crucial military
edge. Furthermore, the Defense Department is well aware that the
security aspects of GPS are an additional burden for many users. And
while we believe such measures are still needed at this time to help
preserve our military advantage, we have set a goal of discontinuing
regular use of the feature known as Selective Availability, the
component that degrades GPS accuracy, within a decade.
Both time and resources are needed to replace the advantages Selective
Availability provides. In light of the revolutionary contributions of
GPS to both military and commercial enterprise, Herring could have
portrayed the technology in a more evenhanded manner.
PAUL G. KAMINSKI
Under Secretary
Department of Defense
-- end of quoted material --
The article, as I recall, was about ways in which civilian users have
found, or are finding, ways around the built-in inaccuarcy of the GPS.
I don't recall whether crypto was mentioned in the article. My
recollection of it was that they had been diddling with the timers or the
clock signal or something, as opposed to encrypting anything. But then
again it has been a while, and my memory of it isn't too clear.
I seem to remember another crypto scheme discussed here at length about
GPS, based on a paper by Dr. Dorothy [?] Denning, which involved having
the intended recipient's coordinates - which were somehow involved in the
encryption.
The coordinates are in 3-D. Spheres centered on three of the GPS
satellites intersect within a very small space.
--
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Return to ““P. J. Ponder” <ponder@freenet.tlh.fl.us>”
1996-09-30 (Mon, 30 Sep 1996 11:35:12 +0800) - Re: GPS [MARGINAL, at best] - “P. J. Ponder” <ponder@freenet.tlh.fl.us>