uijl 1 day ago

Interesting to see that they are able to identify the specific satellite. I wonder if we can do something now that we know the source.

Working on construction projects on the Romanian coastline (just South of Ukraine) and on the Polish continental waters (just West of Kaliningrad) we experienced jamming on a daily basis.

  • colechristensen 1 day ago

    >I wonder if we can do something now that we know the source.

    Russia signed the 1967 Outer Space Treaty (OST) in 1967, this may be a treaty violation of this or other treaties, something like that or retaliation regarding it may be possible.

    You can hack the satellite, or use other electronic warfare options to jam or interfere with it's operations.

    You can shoot it down with a missile.

    The X-37B is in space right now and interfering with space assets is a pretty obvious possibility for why it exists at all, but it's secret so nobody says these things.

    • whizzter 1 day ago

      If you start shooting down stuff in orbit, it'll invite retaliation, but even without retaliation there's a huge risk of a Kessler syndrome (especially with all the stuff that SpaceX has put into orbit in recent years).

      • Aerroon 1 day ago

        I've thought about this before - do you actually need to "shoot it down" (make it explode)? What if you just nudge it a little and either make it spin or change its orbit? If your missile can reach the satellite then these seem like things that should be possible, no?

        • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

          Depends, if you nudge it only a little, its own onboard stabilizers / thrusters should be able to correct it. It'd have to be more than its own systems can correct for.

          • speed_spread 1 day ago

            Nudge it long enough to deplete it's fuel reserves? Or just wrap the emitting antenna in tin foil...

          • sroussey 1 day ago

            There are tug boat style satellites now, one could grab it and force it to Earth.

        • colechristensen 22 hours ago

          A missile intercept for explosions or a kinetic destruction the relative velocity will be measured in kilometers per second.

          A little nudge doesn't do much, it's still a satellite in a substantially similar orbit. Any sort of nudge requires intercept, go up there and match its velocity so you can grab it and push. And still you have to push on it a whole lot to make a meaningful difference. Spin it up? You'd have to do enough to exhaust it's fuel it uses to orient itself.

          You're sort of saying if you can chuck an apple hitting a car on the highway, surely you can tow it away to get it off the road. They're significantly different problems.

          • Aerroon 8 hours ago

            An apple at highway speeds can break the windshield and make the car undriveable. People throwing things from highway overpasses is a serious (and deadly) problem.

            >A missile intercept for explosions or a kinetic destruction the relative velocity will be measured in kilometers per second.

            The satellite will also be going kilometers per second. You have to almost match the orbital velocity to have a chance of hitting it anyway.

            • colechristensen 2 hours ago

              To the contrary, for the 1 satellite missile strike we have public information on, not only did it not catch up to the orbital velocity for intercept, it hit it head on (going the other direction) adding to the relative velocity. A satellite with an ~8 km/s orbital velocity was struck head on by a missile adding to that by ~2 km/s for a total just under 10 km/s.

              It is indeed not that hard to intercept something in orbit. Because the orbits don't change and can be predicted to high precision months in the future.

      • db48x 1 day ago

        No, Kessler syndrome is pretty unlikely in this case. All of the guilty satellites are in Molniya orbits. Debris from destroying them would not greatly effect geosynchronous orbit or the low earth orbits used by Starlink.

      • LiamPowell 1 day ago

        > especially with all the stuff that SpaceX has put into orbit in recent years

        I've heard this repeated a lot but I've never seen anyone do the maths. StarLink satellites are all in very low orbits, so intuitively it seems like most debris from a collision would just end up deorbiting.

        • gpm 1 day ago

          90% of starlink satellites are >400km in altitude. They aren't in very low earth orbits where that intuition even might be correct. They're above the space station.

          I've definitely seen math done - though I'd have to dig it up again. I think in FAA filings.

        • wiml 23 hours ago

          LEO is crowded enough (mostly with Starlink) that satellites have to actively maneuver to avoid collisions [1]. There's research [2] arguing that we're probably already in runaway territory in some orbits — that is, debris from 1 collision likely produces more than one secondary collision — we're just way over on the left of the hockey stick curve. A bit of bad luck, or two megaconstellations that don't perfectly coordinate their operations with each other, could move us to the right pretty quickly.

          [1] https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09643

          [2] https://conference.sdo.esoc.esa.int/proceedings/sdc9/paper/3...

      • ajsnigrutin 19 hours ago

        If you americans start shooting down russian stuff, russians start shooting down american stuff, and there's only chinese stuff left.

    • nutjob2 1 day ago

      > You can shoot it down with a missile.

      Obviously a bad idea, but frying it with some sort of high powered electromagnetic pulse would seem the smartest option with plausible deniability.

      I wonder if the US already has such weapons in orbit.

      • raverbashing 1 day ago

        Kessler event oops, you know. I guess I know someone with several disposable satellites, I wonder if they could be bothered (but I guess not)

      • stef25 1 day ago

        > frying it with some sort of high powered electromagnetic pulse would seem the smartest option with plausible deniability

        Realistically, how many people could do this ?

        • picofarad 1 day ago

          If you gave me a million dollars, I could do it. Someone else would have to aim it, but it shouldn't be that hard to do.

          • mkj 8 hours ago

            From what distance? I would have thought $1M wouldn't go far

        • thesuitonym 1 day ago

          This is not something individuals should be doing.

          • jldugger 15 hours ago

            But it's also not really plausibly deniable if there's only one actor with the means and motive to do it.

      • M95D 1 day ago

        I assume that satellites have protection against that - because of solar flares.

      • colechristensen 1 hour ago

        X37-B it's a tiny robot space shuttle launched by the military.

        Why WOUDLN'T one of its possible payloads be an electronic warfare package? Go up to an adversarial satellite, do some signals intelligence capturing things, have a jamming package, or a stronger EM output to fry circuits.

    • pelorat 9 hours ago

      Like the USA, I don't think Russia codifies treaties into law. Like in the USA, treaties for Russia are mere suggestions used as a geopolitical tool until inconvenient.

  • Schlagbohrer 1 day ago

    That jamming near Kaliningrad must surely be impacting the Russian residents as well, right? Unless it is very carefully aimed which seems unlikely since it is also trying to cover a very large volume.

    • q3k 1 day ago

      Kaliningrad is one big military base.

      • TFNA 1 day ago

        Doesn't sound like you have actually been there. Military is a major employer, but in a territory inhabited since 1944 there are generations of people born there who didn't see a reason to live, the same foreign gastarbeiter as in any Russian city, etc. I.e plenty of ordinary people who could be inconvenienced.

        • lukan 1 day ago

          I don't think you meant it like that, but Kaliningrad, or Königsberg is inhabited since a bit longer. For example Immanuel Kant lived and taught there.

        • TFNA 1 day ago

          reason to leave, sorry.

    • lazide 1 day ago

      1) with the exception of probably a few pensioners (who also depend on gov’t funding), everyone in the area is dependent on the military. It’s a giant military base in the middle of nowhere.

      2) anyone not military (and hence in on it), is a pensioner or the like and won’t give a shit about GPS.

      This is not a thriving urban metropolis or tourist location.

      • Thlom 1 day ago

        The city has half a million residents and the oblast has a million residents. There's restaurants, museums, grocery stores, car dealerships, parks, zoo's, malls, stadiums, factories, train stations, an airport, ports etc etc. It's a real place.

        • lazide 1 day ago

          I never said it wasn’t.

          Killeen, Texas is also a real place.

          How many people do you think don’t have at least a 2 degree connection to the US military?

          Do you think anyone there is going to think twice about going along with what the military is doing? Or could if they wanted too?

          And Killeen is far, far less isolated geographically.

          • u8080 1 day ago

            It is like saying Detroit is military base because there are some military related buildings.

      • akho 1 day ago

        Why lie? It _is_ a tourist location, with > 2mln tourists annually (for their 1 mln permanent population). It also has quite a diverse economy, with Avtotor being a major car assembler (though not quite what it was pre-war), a fishing industry, amber mining, a TV manufacturer, &c. With a significant military presence, of course, but "giant military base in the middle of nowhere" is just ridiculous.

        • Scroll_Swe 1 day ago

          Crazy what the Russians destroyed... (you?)

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%B6nigsberg_Castle

          • lazide 1 day ago

            Hey, old military installations (albeit ancient) are still a type of tourist attraction lol.

            Most places in Russia are hunting and fishing locations too, hah.

          • akho 1 day ago

            Yes, we Russians are entirely responsible for British carpet bombing.

            (I, of course, do not agree with the decision to demolish the remaining ruins in 1968; it could have been handled better.)

      • u8080 1 day ago

        It is not. I.e. there is one of the largest passenger vehicle assembly line Autotor.

    • rcxdude 1 day ago

      Jamming in general will affect everything using those frequencies (and potentially more besides) in a given area, so if you're using it you're weighing up the effects it'll have on your stuff as well. (early in the current Ukrainian invasion, reportedly Russian electronic warfare units were screwing up their own side more than the Ukrainians)

    • Havoc 1 day ago

      >must surely be impacting the Russian residents as well, right?

      They don't give a fuck.

      Was watching a youtube video by a russian the other day talking about war & sanction impact and things like ride sharing apps literally say on screen the location is going to be wrong and to select pickup spot manually. It's just assumed to be fucked as a given even at an app development level

      • yehat 1 day ago

        Does ukrainians and romanians give a fuck, 'cause not many russians live in the north-west part of Black Sea? And the jamming there's from who?

      • chocrates 20 hours ago

        Weren't we promised that quantum dead reckoning was right around the corner?

        • PunchyHamster 19 hours ago

          "works" and "fits in phone" are to VERY different levels of maturity of the tech

      • drysine 9 hours ago

        >and to select pickup spot manually. It's just assumed to be fucked as a given even at an app development level

        No, it's a feature that was there from the beginning - you don't always choose the location you are currently at.

        >They don't give a fuck.

        But yes, we don't give a fuck

    • sorenjan 1 day ago

      Yes, it's very wide spread and not carefully aimed at all. It's also not done by satellite but a ground based station.

      https://gpsjam.org/

      • stef25 1 day ago

        That covers most of Poland, wtf

        • lenerdenator 1 day ago

          Why wouldn't it?

          The behavior will continue until a consequence is imposed.

          Not on regular Russians, mind. Their ruling class. They're still free to move about the continent, make investments, do whatever. Currently Europe seems to be more interested in breaking away from the US than dealing with the power that has killed hundreds of thousands on their own continent.

          • trumpdong 1 day ago

            Europe seems to be interested in neither. As a rule, elites in any country are not concerned about hundreds of thousands of their citizens being killed. I have yet to be proven wrong.

          • Slow_Dog 1 day ago

            Maybe there are reasons Europe is pulling away from the US?

            The current US president has threatened to invade European territory, is attempting to impose Russia's preferred "peace" plan on Ukraine, and has recently relaxed sanctions on Russia. He also consistently denigrates the military support Europe's given to the US in the recent past. The US has basically cut aid to Ukraine to zero, while Europe continues to supply them, which is currently the best way of dealing with Russia, sucking their military power into a war their not going to win.

            • lenerdenator 1 day ago

              And?

              When the Russians invaded Georgia in 2008, Europeans inked a deal for a second gas pipeline with them, Nordstream 2. When they annexed Crimea in 2014, Europeans went to the Sochi Olympics (which happened that same year) and went to the World Cup in 2018. And this is before you take into account the dozens of smaller incidents.

              Those aren't "threats to invade European territory", not even ones that were ignored by the military. Those were shooting wars that got people killed and redrew the map in Eurasia. Europeans continued to do business with Russia more-or-less unimpeded until 2022. Many Russians still live, work, and do business in the Schengen area.

              The US Congress passed a bill to fund Ukraine this week. [0]

              [0] https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/house-passes-ukraine...

              • justsomehnguy 23 hours ago

                Remind us, why US Congress funds a country on literally the other side of the planet?

                • singleshot_ 19 hours ago

                  It’s cheaper than landing ten divisions of Marines.

              • badc0ffee 23 hours ago

                The (misguided IMO) idea was that buying their gas and integrating them into world markets would strengthen ties and liberalize them in the medium term.

                Nobody believes that anymore, post-2022.

                • notagorn 22 hours ago

                  I don't think it was misguided; Nuland-Pyatt leak and the tapping of Merkel's phone made it pretty clear to me that like in the Yeltsin years the problem was that the US didn't want Russia/Europe ties to succeed.

              • bigfudge 20 hours ago

                The funding bill is never getting past the Senate, and even if it were the money is unlikely to reach Ukraine unless the current admin has a fundamental change of heart.

              • PunchyHamster 19 hours ago

                Well, and we are paying for those mistakes now.

                EU had that weird idea that if we just be nice to Russia and tolerate their bullshit for long enough they will warm up to us. Turns out that doesn't really work for country that entire foreign policy could be summed up as "bullying and lying"

                • orbital-decay 15 hours ago

                  I'm sorry but bullshit is what you're talking about. UK took money from Russian oligarchs (that they stole from my pocket) while being perfectly aware of the source, and later pretended they're "fighting" it when the potato got too hot to handle, never returning the invested money and essentially blaming me by proxy, someone who attempted to bring it under control. Germany was happy building pipelines and providing the high precision machines under the corrupt leader colluding with Russia, only breaking ties after the war and making said leader a scapegoat. It was all about your wealth at the cost of my wealth and freedom, you provided most money for the war and Russian elites' superyachts, and profited from it greatly with full awareness of what you're doing, and you were OK with that as long as the costs were externalized. Now you're pretending it was noble peacemaking, an honest mistake, and someone else is to blame. What's worse, you don't seem to learn from either our or your mistakes, willingly building a cage for yourself with a lag of just a few years.

          • varispeed 1 day ago

            US has got itself compromised by Russia. US president is a Russian asset. Breaking away from unreliable former ally is the logical thing to do for Europe's security.

            Funny how Ukraine situation started improving once they have severly limited sharing information with the US.

          • Supernaut 1 day ago

            > They're still free to move about the continent, make investments, do whatever

            Except that's not true at all, is it? See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_sanctions_during...

            • sorenjan 1 day ago

              It's not completely true, but there are hundreds of thousands of visas given to Russian tourists each year by European countries, something that's hopefully will get corrected soon.

              > According to data cited in Wednesday's letter, which was seen by Reuters, 477,878 Schengen visas were issued to Russian citizens for tourism in 2025, up from 440,558 in 2024.

              https://www.reuters.com/world/sweden-urges-eu-tighten-rules-...

              • lenerdenator 1 day ago

                It should have been the very first thing to go.

          • AlecSchueler 6 hours ago

            > Currently Europe seems to be more interested in breaking away from the US

            The efforts taken to move away from Russia in the past 5 years clearly dwarf any de-Americanisation efforts to the point that it's difficult to take your comment seriously after this sentence.

      • mapt 1 day ago

        How far is the horizon from the tallest antenna mast in Kaliningrad?

      • stogot 1 day ago

        Why is Ukraine not jammed in this map? Shouldn’t that be Russia’s priority?

        • forgotTheLast 1 day ago

          GPS interference is estimated from ADS-B data which is broadcast by airplanes so that they can be tracked. The lack of data over Ukraine is because their airspace is closed to civilian flights.

        • sorenjan 1 day ago

          The GNSS jamming in Ukraine is mostly from Ukraine themselves, to defend against Russian drones and guided bombs.

          Just as Iran jams GNSS, and Venezuela jammed GNSS ahead of the attack. Didn't really help though.

          https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/05/nasa-satellites-can-...

          • codedokode 1 day ago

            Probably because Wester jammers are used from ground and drones have antennas on the top side. For comparison, Russian satellite can jam the signal from above and on a large area. Russian technology is superior.

            • sorenjan 1 day ago

              If Russian GNSS receivers wasn't affected they wouldn't need fiber optic drones, Ukraine is jamming both the small and large drones. Russia have both their own Kometa system to try to filter out the jamming signals, and plenty of Chinese tech as well.

              Russian technology is very dependent on both western and Chinese tech, yet they couldn't even defend their own oil refineries in St Petersburg or make any relevant progress along the front in years.

              • codedokode 1 day ago

                To be fair, USA also could not defend their allies and their bases, and didn't move the frontline in Iran as well. And if Iran buys a submarine capable to launch missiles from a friendly country the situation might get worse.

        • lefty2 23 hours ago

          They would be jamming their own glide bombs and drones then. It would be more useful to jam Russian airspace to defeat Ukrainian drone attacks.

    • Scroll_Swe 1 day ago

      >That jamming near Kaliningrad must surely be impacting the Russian residents as well, right?

      Russia does not care, nor does it care about its population.

      Where are you from?

      I ask because you have western privilege, like me, and assume our governments care about its people. Why I lucked out being born in Sweden, the more I learn about the world, the more I am convinced I lucked out ahahaha.

    • ponector 1 day ago

      No one gives a fuck what russian residents are thinking about it. And if they start to talk about issues - police will quickly force everyone to shut up.

      • preisschild 1 day ago

        Thats true, but its also true that most russians support this war. Maybe they dont say it, but they are the soldiers in the trenches, mechanical engineers building missiles, software developers building their military software, Oil/NG workers that fund the war and so on

        • M95D 1 day ago

          I'm sure that if you ask any of them, they would say that they don't have a choice. Same as western IT developers that continue to support the enshittification of the internet. They don't have a choice. /s

        • codedokode 1 day ago

          The soldiers in the trenches now are mostly recruited from convicts/suspects who want to get a pardon, and volunteers lured by large salary and bonuses, and loan repayment suspension. Most prefer to support the war from the couch.

        • mbs159 21 hours ago

          It's more reasonable to say that the russian people tolerate the war as long as it does not impact their economic situation over a certain tolerance threshold. Almost all of the fighters from the Russian side are on paid voluntary contracts for a reason.

    • NoSalt 1 day ago

      Do you believe Putin cares who he inconveniences?

    • codedokode 1 day ago

      Russians got used that GPS in Moscow and St. Petersburg often shows wrong position (I did not observe it because I never enable GPS though). We also have mobile Internet shoutdowns which are more annoying than GPS spoofing.

    • ifwinterco 1 day ago

      I’ve briefly been somewhere for a few days with significant GPS interference, and yes, basically phone navigation doesn’t work reliably.

      For me it was a minor annoyance while driving but presumably any apps that rely heavily on GPS (Uber, food delivery) just wouldn’t work very well or at all

    • neonstatic 15 hours ago

      Yes, it does, and they don't care, bc russian "culture" has no regard for life or people in general. Everyone and everything is expendable.

    • dyauspitr 3 hours ago

      One of Russia’s superpowers is that they don’t give a damn about collateral damage on their own people. This isn’t just a throwaway comment I’m making this actually bears out over several decades.

  • Scroll_Swe 1 day ago

    Russia is constantly GPS jamming EU.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clyx3ly54veo

    So funny seeing non-EU people and/or people friendly to Russia comment (not you)

    Carry on!

    • embedding-shape 1 day ago

      Yeah, same with traveling by boat in the Baltic Sea, been continuously GPS-jammed since 2022 or something annoying like that, basically the entire South East-coast of Sweden been unnavigatable with GPS since then.

yladiz 1 day ago
  • sippeangelo 1 day ago

    The theory that they broadcast communication on a band near GPS in order to discourage jamming of their early warning system sounds likely. Flexing the ability to jam GPS is pointless, since it's obvious that any state actor who has military satellites in orbit has considered this option or have the capability already. Therefore, the disruptions must either be regular tests of the capability, or just actual communication. Right?

    • wcarss 1 day ago

      Or actual jamming mistargeted for some reason, or used because it was deemed necessary.

      • alex_duf 1 day ago

        Repeatedly, over years, only for 2 to 5 seconds at a time? Seems unlikely

        • wcarss 1 day ago

          yeah, I have to admit I was commenting on possibilities here without having gone into the article yet -- having now looked for real, I agree that the disruptions don't seem very useful for actual jamming and repeatedly like this for years across satellites and bands in this specific way doesn't make sense for some mistaken targeting either.

        • idiotsecant 1 day ago

          There is a very good reason to do this. Suppose you had a device that would make the shoplifting detectors at stores go off. The first time you did it everyone would get hassled. And the second time and so forth. But if you kept doing it eventually the employees would stop caring. Then you just walk out the door with your stuff.

    • throw0101a 1 day ago

      > Flexing the ability to jam GPS is pointless, since it's obvious that any state actor who has military satellites in orbit has considered this option or have the capability already.

      Forget "state actors", truck drivers have taken out entire airports with GPS jammers:

      * https://www.cnet.com/culture/truck-driver-has-gps-jammer-acc...

      People like the Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation have been trying for years to get some kind of GNSS backup accepted:

      * https://rntfnd.org

      China has certainly put their money into resiliency (both navigation and timing):

      * https://www.gpsworld.com/china-completes-national-eloran-net...

      * https://rntfnd.org//2026/03/19/china-has-built-a-triad-of-sa...

      * https://rntfnd.org/2023/11/28/china-eloran-used-for-critical...

      Some folks are certainly cluing in: South Korea has (e)Loran and the UK and France are joining up with them:

      * https://rntfnd.org/2025/04/30/the-uks-system-of-systems-appr...

      * https://rntfnd.org/2025/11/12/s-korea-leads-meeting-with-u-k...

    • Havoc 1 day ago

      Unless the actor happens to be a state that puts a great deal of emphasis on flexing & appearances regardless of how pointless it is

    • rcxdude 1 day ago

      There is definitely value in having a demonstrated as opposed a simply supposed capability, though. And actions that are 'almost-certainly-but-not-completely-provably-us' is very much something Russia likes to do.

      (One question I would have about the comms theory is whether the amount of power being used would be reasonable for that use-case. Jamming tends to be much higher power than just communicating, but also GNSS signals are very low bandwidth as comms channels go)

      • ralferoo 1 day ago

        > One question I would have about the comms theory is whether the amount of power being used would be reasonable for that use-case. Jamming tends to be much higher power than just communicating, but also GNSS signals are very low bandwidth as comms channels go

        GPS is suprisingly low power. I believe the satellites themselves transmit between 20W and 50W, and in general the signal is quieter than the background noise threshold. It's only by correlating with the PRNG stream [1] that the data signal can be detected at all [2].

        [1] The PRNG stream is 1023 bits at 1.023Mbps, so repeats every 1ms, and only autocorrelates with the correct stream when they are aligned. When the streams are not aligned, the data looks like random noise, and each transmitter has a different LFSR configuration to provide a different sequence such that each stream has a low level of correlation with another.

        [2] The PRNG stream bits at 1.023Mbps are exclusive-or'd with the data stream at 50bps, so when the decoder is using the correct PRNG and sequence offset, exclusive-or'ing with that produces detectable long pulses at the expected 50bps.

        • trumpdong 1 day ago

          FWIW this is how almost every communication system works. They're all weaker than background noise (e.g. sunlight) but you extract them by correlating with some kind of carrier signal (often but not always a sine wave)

          • labcomputer 1 day ago

            Err what?

            No, conventional radio broadcasts can be received with a low noise amplifier and a tuned filter.

            The received GPS signal, at ground level, is lower than the thermal noise floor. And the 1.023MHz code is modulated on the RF carrier anyway.

            • trumpdong 1 day ago

              > and a tuned filter

              So correlating it with a sine wavelet?

              • mrguyorama 23 hours ago

                No? Old AM radio required only rectification. You can receive it with accidental diodes.

                • rcxdude 20 hours ago

                  You do generally need a tuned filter before the rectification, unless you have an extremely large signal dominating the local airwaves. Which is precisely the parent poster's point: with RF you are almost always doing something to demodulate the signal. Whether you are doing it with a sine wave or something more complicated is not that fundamentally different. (and if you're looking at a spectrum analysis, that is looking at the radio signal from the point of view of that sinusoidal modulation scheme, so you will see such signals 'above' the noise floor more readily than something using a different modulation).

                  • ralferoo 6 hours ago

                    I'd argue that "correlation" is an accurate description of what you're doing with Gold codes - you're testing the known sequence of the output of a PRNG against the received signal, and only accepting it when the data correlates, otherwise you're adjusting the offset and trying again until you find a high correlation (strong +ve and -ve spikes) or you give up and assume there's no transmission. There's nothing in the received signal that tells you there is a real signal there at all, without correlating against every possible offset.

                    If you compare that to the majority of radio transmissions modulated on a sine wave carrier, there is a clear signal there and you don't need to correlate anything to tell you that, and you don't need to keep trying different offsets - you can just demodulate using a carrier of the correct frequency and the result is correct, just with a slight phase shift relative to the local carrier and which probably isn't even relevant in the frequency domain of the signal.

                    The key point to me is the trying repeated offsets to try to pick out a signal well below the noise floor, and choosing the offset that provides the best correlation, compared to demodulating a very strong signal that's obviously there by just adding a carrier. The latter could be done using "correlation" if you're implementing an SDR, but it doesn't have to be, and most radio hams would prefer to think of it as a simple analogue operation instead.

                • trumpdong 20 hours ago

                  You also need an accidental antenna. A tuned one that preferentially receives certain sines. Or else you are receiving sunlight with a solar panel.

    • ordu 1 day ago

      > The theory that they broadcast communication on a band near GPS in order to discourage jamming of their early warning system sounds likely.

      Is it? If it is an early warning system, could it be jammed briefly so it would fail to warn, couldn't it? It will be a global disruption of GPS, but a brief one and I'm sure people wouldn't be concerned of it due to other news.

      > Flexing the ability to jam GPS is pointless

      Do you believe that cutting sea cables is a sensible action? Or sending drones to neighbors? It is what they call "hybrid asymmetric warfare", I'm not sure how it is supposed to work, but presumably it may let them take over the world or something.

      Probably they just strive to normalize deviations, to boil frog slowly. When people become used to some stupid actions they widen their repertoire, until everything short of tanks crossing the borders became just normal news noise nobody reads twice.

      • fsmv 19 hours ago

        Presumably the missile needs GPS to hit the target so if you jam right when the missile is coming in the missile will miss so you can't really jam the warning

        Also if you broadcast noise when your missile is about to hit then your own jamming signal acts as an early warning as well, although I guess it wouldn't provide location.

        • stouset 18 hours ago

          ICBMs don’t rely on GPS. They are typically self-guided and use a blend of their known launch location, inertial navigation using gyroscopes, celestial navigation (yes, looking at stars), and a few other techniques.

        • jandrewrogers 17 hours ago

          US weapon systems have never relied on GPS for guidance. Some will accept GPS corrections to the primary inertial guidance system but those corrections will be rejected if they deviate more than a few meters from the inertial guidance. US missiles in particular use precision terminal guidance which doesn't involve GPS at all; in these systems GPS would only be used to correct mid-course guidance.

          There has been anecdotal evidence for years suggesting that the latest US inertial guidance technology is sufficiently precise and accurate that GPS correction no longer adds value.

        • sidewndr46 4 hours ago

          This isn't true for US made weapons. They explicitly do not use GPS because it is the first thing to go in a war

    • codedokode 1 day ago

      Why these capabilities, if they exist, were not used to send Iranian drones to a wrong target? Maybe because they do not exist. Israel definitely would be happy if thousands of drones were rerouted to a neighbour country or into the sea.

      • scotty79 1 day ago

        Are there any credible reports of Iran hitting any intended target smaller than a city? Because the drone doesn't need to have GPS for that.

        • actionfromafar 17 hours ago

          American AWACS bombed on the ground, that is smaller than a city.

    • scotty79 1 day ago

      Even if that's for communication, repurposing it for mass jamming shouldn't be that hard. It already has this effect. Unless it's low power satellites that wouldn't be able to sustain radio signal in anything longer than short bursts.

    • atleta 19 hours ago

      The flexing seems stupid, but also if it's a communication channel, they have given themselves away (just as if they were flexing with the jamming).

  • sam_lowry_ 1 day ago

    The video did not settle on the jamming of von der Leyen plane on approach to Plovdiv, but AFAIR it was a (likely unintentional) lie.

    Never acknowledged by von der Leyen nor by her press secretary because it exposed the lack of basic world knowledge around von der Leyen and her office.

    • sam_lowry_ 1 day ago

      Why downvotes?

      Here's the press conference where it was announced: https://audiovisual.ec.europa.eu/en/media/video/I-276341

      FlightRadar24 disproved the story shortly after: https://twitter.com/flightradar24/status/1962565122326700178

      TLDR: Neither von den Leyen nor her office knew about ADB-S nor about the multiple services that collect ADB-S broadcasts and republish, and there was none around who could stop them from announcing an embarrassing lie.

      • embedding-shape 1 day ago

        > Why downvotes?

        Probably because some missing mention of some specific thing you care deeply about doesn't imply "lack of basic world knowledge" for an entire political office, really strange thing to say and most likely why people are downvoting. It's neither kind, curious and definitively a snark/swipe that doesn't really add anything to the point you were trying to make.

        • sam_lowry_ 1 day ago

          I think you normalize the deviation, here.

          If you listen to the press conference, Podesta (the press secretary) spoke about the plane circling and not being able to land. When preparing the press conference, she should have checked if this obvious lie can be obviously disproved, but she did not. This probably means that she did not know this was a lie, but then someone who ordered this to be announced knew.

          My bet is that von der Leyen or her close aide told Podesta to announce the lie in these terms, and the thing that worries me as a European is that there was none to warn these war-mongering ladies that they are making a mistake. This whole situation screams for an intern that sets up the mics and has a callsign and who can stop Podesta as she walks to the pied de stal of shame and explain that the position of planes is monitored all the time and is public information.

          But I bet that all their interns are servile 3rd generation eurocrats.

          P.S. The whole press conference (and many others) are fascinating to listen to. The language these people use is softened by the media. What do you think von der Leyen was doing on that plane? She was going "along the frontline" to inspect our preparedness for war where "the frontline" is the Eastern EU border.

          P.P.S The story made rounds in EU circles, and there was a parliamentary question offering a chance to apologize, but von der Leyen chose to ignore it.

          • embedding-shape 1 day ago

            > I think you normalize the deviation, here.

            I don't care about Ursula von der Leyen nor her plane, merely explaining that if you try to extrapolate that a group of people don't have "basic world knowledge" based on not knowing a specific technology nor how/why it's used, the community is actually doing the rest of us a favor by downvoting it.

            Want to discuss her office's use of a plane and how it's related to inspecting ammunition factories or whatever tirade you're going on about? Do create a new submission where that can be discussed, hardly related to the interesting story and methods of trying to track down GNSS interference.

            • sam_lowry_ 1 day ago

              It's a 9 months old story, even the MEP who wrote the question got over it.

              I raised it because it was mentioned in the Veritassium video, but they stopped short of calling it a lie. They wanted to stay on topic, but the beauty of HN is that we can wander slightly off-topic and discover curious facts without being punished.

              • embedding-shape 1 day ago

                Yeah, curious facts like "it exposed the lack of basic world knowledge around von der Leyen and her office". Go outside brother, and get some fresh air before that too disappears :)

            • yehat 23 hours ago

              "the community" is a very small privileged group, hope you know that.

RealityVoid 23 hours ago

Mildly interesting, and highly likely related. A cluster of 5(?) Ukrainian marine drones wound up today outside and around of Constanta off the coast of Romania with one detonating in the port and the rest detonating... somewhere around. Que here noisy exposion in port:

https://youtu.be/Y8kdneBU_3Q?si=cr07TeMnxJTG-3TM&t=17

No significant damage.

The Ukrainans apparently lost control of the drones and they wound up there. My pet theory is that Russian EW jammed the control signals and guided the GPS jamming walking them to Constanta. I'll admit, if it was intentional (it seems so) it's pretty damn' impressive work from Russian EW.

NKosmatos 1 day ago

TLDR (conclusion from the paper): "By a combination of these techniques the satellite Cosmos 2546 (NORAD ID 45608) was identified with high confidence as one source of the interference. Further analysis pointed to the Russian Edinaya Kosmicheskaya Sistema, an early warning constellation to which Cosmos 2546 belongs, as collectively responsible for the wide-area transient interference causing GNSS degradation across Europe since 2019."

  • jeroenhd 1 day ago

    Additionally:

    > Note that Cosmos 2546 was launched in May 2020 and so cannot be responsible for the interference events that occurred in 2019. Moreover, Cosmos 2546 was not over Europe during some interference events after May 2020. But during all events on the 75 days shown in Table 1 there was at least one EKS satellite above a 35∘ elevation angle with respect to every reference station that observed the interference. Thus, it is highly probable that the EKS constellation is collectively responsible for the wide-area transient GNSS interference events noted since 2019.

DumpoLumbo 1 day ago

I wonder why they call this specific discovery “jamming”. What they found is a relatively rare burst transmissions over roughly 5MHz of spectrum of something looking like a 12ms cyclic prefix with spacing related to 150 seconds multiplies. I would suspect it is some sort of sync or data close to L1 GPS frequencies, that as a side effect causing lower CNR for the GPS receivers. Btw it is only 10dB, which also I can’t really call “jamming”.

Overall it seems to be an overfitting the observation to the wider intent of a malicious actor.

  • scotty79 23 hours ago

    > I wonder why they call this specific discovery “jamming”.

    Because it jamms.

    • DumpoLumbo 20 hours ago

      Well 10dB lower CNR for couple seconds doesn't pass my definition of jamm, but rather is a minor co-channel interference.

f137 1 day ago

I do not see any discussion of the power required for such wide-area jamming. Even as the useful GPS signal is quite weak at the ground level, this satellite would require power in kW range, right?

  • awestroke 1 day ago

    Satellites have multi kW solar panels

    • masklinn 1 day ago

      Being on a Molniya orbit probably also helps: the apogee is at nearly 40000km, but the perigee is on the order of 1600 (according to the EKS wiki page), so outside of their primary observation points of their orbit they are quite close to the earth and thus have a ton of blasting ability for satellites with geostationary comms capabilities.

dwa3592 1 day ago

Hmm - the timing is uncanny that only 2 days ago I started building a dead reckoning system.

  • Joel_Mckay 1 day ago

    Your local cellphone towers already provide a more accurate position beacon signal for GPS modules in most parts of the world. Additional RF beam-forming in G5+ systems also make it impractical for lamers to jam long-distances due to limited coherent signal propagation.

    Indeed, amateur Hams have caught Russian ships jamming/spoofing local port traffic several years before the various official overseas conflicts started. Not sure if it is government sponsored, or just various smuggling schemes like some ships spamming China harbors. =3

    • dwa3592 1 day ago

      Agreed about cellphone towers providing accurate position, but not with enough precision and highly dependent on the number of towers in the vicinity.

      What i started building is for a highly unlikely scenario which is ; no internet + no GPS + no cell tower.

      • picofarad 1 day ago

        I have this idea that I'll get Bosch 9-DoF sensors onto every lane of every road, at least twice a month, then any other thing on a road can use a Shazam - like waveform lookup to determine where they are.

        I didn't come up with this for dead reckoning, it's more for, um, autonomous cars to be able to avoid potholes and stuff.

  • platybubsy 1 day ago

    GPS jamming has been happening for years and it's not like dead reckoning is an insane new concept

    • dwa3592 23 hours ago

      what are you saying? nothing of what you said is new or unknown.

atomicbeanie 22 hours ago

Comm signal in band with GPS? Control for a GPS software supply chain attack?

avazhi 1 day ago

It's been known that Russia does GPS interference near their Western border and the Baltic down to Ukraine for several years now. It's something airline pilots prepare for now, and expect.

Not sure why this is being couched as novel or surprising.

  • dingaling 1 day ago

    The novel aspect is that it is being conducted by a satellite, rather than a ground station. Which is an escalation in sophistication which makes counter-jamming much more difficult and also gives global reach to the jammer.

  • numlock86 1 day ago

    You could actually try reading the paper first before posting comments like this.

    • avazhi 1 day ago

      Was responding to many of these comments, which read as if the commenters haven’t heard of this before.

      The top comment in this thread is some dude asking if we can ‘do something now that we know the source’ lol.

      We’ve known the source for 5 years. The fact this particular jamming originates from a Russian satellite and not Russian terrestrial-based equipment doesn’t change much. And while it’s unconvenient for planes and affects separation minima, planes have inertial systems and pilots deal with this easily. It happens in many places around the world, actually, although the Russians are definitely the worst offenders.

spwa4 1 day ago

TLDR: Russia is jamming GPS and GNSS over Europe, purposefully, using a constellation of military satellites, part of the Russian nuclear program.

Theory is that Russia has been constantly practicing to totally disrupt GPS and GNSS (and the Chinese system) across all of Europe since 2014. Practicing to deploy electronic warfare not across a warzone or even a country but an entire continent.

  • yehat 23 hours ago

    Who's theory is that? Is it proven by independent research?

ThePowerOfFuet 1 day ago

Saved you a click:

>This paper analyzes and identifies a space-based Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) interference source that has caused scores of powerful transient wide-area interference events over continental Europe, Greenland, and Canada since 2019. While terrestrial or near-terrestrial sources are primarily responsible for the recent uptick in GNSS interference worldwide, space-based interferers are of special concern given their potential for vast geographic reach and their portent of a qualitative escalation in GNSS interference. Based on data collected between 2019 and 2026 from a network of terrestrial GNSS reference stations, this paper (1) develops a received-power-based detection framework; (2) details the spatial, temporal, and spectral patterns of wide-area interference events caused by the source; (3) presents and analyzes identification techniques that blend received-power and time-difference-of-arrival measurements; and (4) applies these techniques to confidently identify the GNSS interference source as a constellation of Russian early warning satellites in Molniya ("lightning") orbits.

mattlondon 1 day ago

tl;dr - it was Russian satellites

  • imp0cat 1 day ago

    How unsuprising.

  • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

    This tl;dr is actually in the tl;dr on the linked page. We're doing tl;drs for tl;drs now?

    • Schlagbohrer 1 day ago

      In the future abstracts will be called Tilldars and no one will remember it came originally from trying to pronounce "tldr"

    • muyuu 1 day ago

      it should be right in the title tbh, not after some 150 words of prose

Coala15 1 day ago

Being engaged to warfare with Russia and being jammed in response. So weird.

  • preisschild 1 day ago

    Russia attacked Europe, this is just another reminder that they are our enemies and we should be sabotaging their systems in turn.

    • Coala15 1 day ago

      Relax, Russia didn't attacked Europe yet (if you mean EU).

      • adrian_b 1 day ago

        It may not have attacked intentionally the EU yet, but a week ago there was an incident when a Russian drone apparently strayed away from whatever Ukrainian target it may have had, and it hit an apartment building in the city of Galati, in Romania, in the EU, injuring two people.

        In the past there have been other incidents with Russian weapons reaching the neighboring countries from the EU, like Poland and Romania, but this was the first time when they hit a populated area, causing human injuries.

        • dmitrygr 1 day ago

          That was not a Russian drone in Romania. Ukraine has admitted it was theirs.

          https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c707098wkzpo

          • throwaway9524 1 day ago

            The linked article disproves your claim. It seems you're mistaking the naval drone incident, which did not cause casualties, with the Russian drone strike.

            > The country's defence ministry said the drone had self-detonated near an oil terminal without causing any casualties, although authorities have said it caused considerable damage to a ship and warehouses.

            > Ukraine later confirmed one of its naval drones had been involved, saying it had been knocked off course by Russian electronic interference. Moscow has yet to comment.

            > It also comes a week after two people were injured when a drone hit a Romanian apartment block in the eastern city of Galati - close to the border with Ukraine.

            > Romanian officials said they had confirmed it was a Russian drone but Moscow said "accusations" of its involvement were "unsubstantiated".

            • dmitrygr 19 hours ago

              You’re right. I confused the two. Thanks for the correction.

      • NicuCalcea 1 day ago

        They said Europe, why would you assume the EU?

  • awestroke 1 day ago

    Russia is the aggressor. What do you propose?

    • Npovview 1 day ago

      Playing Devil's advocate, given how much firepower Russia has, why is it so soft on Ukraine. I mean what is the endgoal for Russia here? Tire out the US/NATO Empire just as US did to Soviets in Afghanistan. I sometimes feel like all these events are orchestrated as Simon Dixon talks about them in his videos.

      https://www.youtube.com/@SimonDixon21/videos

      • dieortin 1 day ago

        In which way is Russia being soft on Ukraine?

      • vardump 23 hours ago

        Are you joking? Russia has thrown everything it has at Ukraine for quite some time.

        • CrzyLngPwd 21 hours ago

          Everything> Are you sure?

          They have a large nuclear arsenal; I'm sure the news would have covered it being used.

          What news do you follow that shows Ukraine as a hot nuclear desert?

          • Geof25 19 hours ago

            China and India signalled to Russia that nukes are big no-no.

            Reason is simple - using nukes when you can't win a conventional war will degrade them from strategic asset into tactical one and whole nuclear proliferation flies out of the window and everyone will have nukes.

      • inglor_cz 23 hours ago

        Russia is throwing most of its deployable conventional firepower on Ukraine and whatever robots, KABs, missiles and drones it can manufacture. It is their manufacturing capability which is limited.

        Have you seen the Oryx list of destroyed equipment? The defunct Soviet Union produced a shitton of armored vehicles, Russia inherited most of them and they all got burnt in Ukraine.

  • general1465 1 day ago

    The GPS jamming has been measured since 2019.

DivingForGold 1 day ago

You can likely bet that Space X with their thousands of sats deployed in space already has among them a few hundred stealth US military sats strategically placed and ready for the command to deal with the few Russky sats causing these problems ... think our Space Force.

  • general1465 1 day ago

    Completely different orbits to make this possible