Christopher Mims, a technology columnist for the Wall Street Journal, talks about the rise in GPS dead zones and what ...
GPS jamming and spoofing by Iran have intensified dramatically since the outbreak of conflict in the Middle East, creating critical vulnerabilities for both commercial aviation and military operations ...
The war with Iran is laying bare the dangers posed to commercial ships and planes by the rise of GPS interference in and ...
L3Harris Technologies (LHX) said it delivered 100,000 next-generation Military-Code, or M-Code, GPS receivers to the U.S. and allied forces, marking a milestone in efforts to modernize positioning, ...
Electronic interference with satellite navigation systems has emerged as a significant threat in modern conflicts, particularly impacting military operations that rely on drones and precision weapons.
The war in Iran has dominated headlines with reports of airstrikes and escalating military activity. But beyond the immediate devastation, the conflict has also illuminated a quieter and rapidly ...
False signals mimicking GPS and GNSS have been creating trouble for flight operations in the Middle East amid the ongoing military conflict.
A new study investigates how “flex power”, a technology that dynamically redistributes satellite signal power to resist interference, affects positioning accuracy and navigation reliability.
Thousands of commercial airline flights in Europe have reportedly had their GPS data jammed, as Russia is suspected of waging the electronic attacks amid its ongoing war in Ukraine, according to ...
The global positioning system (GPS) capabilities of cargo ships, oil tankers, and other vessels stuck in the Middle East ...
A growing threat known as GPS spoofing is disrupting pilots and navigation systems across parts of the Middle East, including the United Arab Emirates, raising concerns over aviation safety and signal ...
NASA and the Italian Space Agency's Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment succeeded in its first attempt to acquire Earth-based navigation signals from the moon on March 3, 2025. Credit: NASA / Dave Ryan ...