GPS anti-spoofing

In 1983, United States 40th President, Ronald Reagan, has made usage of Global Positioning System (GPS) available for civilian uses for free. Since then, we have been heavily reliant on GPS technology to help us determine precise and accurate location using our GPS receiver. One of the most common G...

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Main Author: Tan, Jin Wei
Other Authors: Tan Soon Yim
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139563
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1395632023-07-07T18:26:08Z GPS anti-spoofing Tan, Jin Wei Tan Soon Yim School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering esytan@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering In 1983, United States 40th President, Ronald Reagan, has made usage of Global Positioning System (GPS) available for civilian uses for free. Since then, we have been heavily reliant on GPS technology to help us determine precise and accurate location using our GPS receiver. One of the most common GPS receivers that almost everybody in Singapore has, is our smartphones. Many people, including you and me, uses mobile navigation applications, such as Google Maps and Waze, for directions. As those applications provide nearly instantaneous directions on the go, we tend to be reliant on those navigation applications for directions whether we are walking or driving to a specific location. However, in recent years, it is a worrying sight that GPS Spoofing is getting more and more common. As a result, your trusted navigation applications may inevitably show you inaccurate coordinates without you knowing that your GPS signal was hijacked by hackers. It poses a noteworthy danger if you rely on the navigation application, to navigate from one location to another in your car, as the hacker can possibly mislead you to a place that compromises your personal safety. All of these is just an example of what GPS Spoofing can do. GPS Anti-Spoofing, which is the mitigation/protection of GPS Spoofing, is considered as a newer field that is less explored. Thus, this project will be focusing more on the GPS Anti-Spoofing aspects. This project explores on the detection of GPS Spoofing via digital threats as opposed to RF-based threats. The project also explore how we can program a functional GPS Anti-Spoofing Detector with the help of Google Maps Platform (GMP), which provides us with accurate land information. Bachelor of Engineering (Information Engineering and Media) 2020-05-20T05:49:37Z 2020-05-20T05:49:37Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139563 en A3248-191 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Tan, Jin Wei
GPS anti-spoofing
description In 1983, United States 40th President, Ronald Reagan, has made usage of Global Positioning System (GPS) available for civilian uses for free. Since then, we have been heavily reliant on GPS technology to help us determine precise and accurate location using our GPS receiver. One of the most common GPS receivers that almost everybody in Singapore has, is our smartphones. Many people, including you and me, uses mobile navigation applications, such as Google Maps and Waze, for directions. As those applications provide nearly instantaneous directions on the go, we tend to be reliant on those navigation applications for directions whether we are walking or driving to a specific location. However, in recent years, it is a worrying sight that GPS Spoofing is getting more and more common. As a result, your trusted navigation applications may inevitably show you inaccurate coordinates without you knowing that your GPS signal was hijacked by hackers. It poses a noteworthy danger if you rely on the navigation application, to navigate from one location to another in your car, as the hacker can possibly mislead you to a place that compromises your personal safety. All of these is just an example of what GPS Spoofing can do. GPS Anti-Spoofing, which is the mitigation/protection of GPS Spoofing, is considered as a newer field that is less explored. Thus, this project will be focusing more on the GPS Anti-Spoofing aspects. This project explores on the detection of GPS Spoofing via digital threats as opposed to RF-based threats. The project also explore how we can program a functional GPS Anti-Spoofing Detector with the help of Google Maps Platform (GMP), which provides us with accurate land information.
author2 Tan Soon Yim
author_facet Tan Soon Yim
Tan, Jin Wei
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Jin Wei
author_sort Tan, Jin Wei
title GPS anti-spoofing
title_short GPS anti-spoofing
title_full GPS anti-spoofing
title_fullStr GPS anti-spoofing
title_full_unstemmed GPS anti-spoofing
title_sort gps anti-spoofing
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139563
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