<http://www.newscientist.com/news/print.jsp?id=ns99993567>

New Scientist

GPS phones confiscated from reporters in Iraq 

 

15:26 31 March 03 

Will Knight 

 

Satellite phones with built-in Global Positioning System (GPS) capabilities have been 
confiscated from journalists travelling with US troops inside Iraq, due to fears that 
they could inadvertently reveal their positions. 

Reporters "embedded" with the troops have been asked to hand over satellite telephones 
operated by Thuraya Satellite Telecommunications, a communications company based in 
Abu Dhabi. The restriction is limited to units near the war's front-line and is 
expected to be temporary, a spokesman for US central command in Qatar told New 
Scientist .

A spokeswoman for the US Department of Defense added that reporters with unaffected 
satellite phones would be asked to share them and that military communications 
equipment would be made available when possible. Replacement phones could also be sent 
to the front line. 

Richard Langley, a GPS expert at the University of New Brunswick, Canada, says US 
military commanders may be concerned that positioning information embedded in signals 
sent by the Thuraya phones could be intercepted and used by Iraqi forces to locate and 
attack US troops. 

"It's not impossible, although it would be rather difficult," Langley told New 
Scientist . "The signals are line-of-sight [from handset to satellite] so very little 
would leak out and be interceptable on the ground." 


Ground station intercept 

It would be easier to intercept the signal as it arrives from the satellite at the 
network operator's ground station, he says. But even in this case, any interceptor 
would still have to crack the encryption protecting the signal. 

An alternative concern is that the US military are worried that computers used to 
store call information are vulnerable to cyber attack. "Perhaps the concern was that 
there would be a log of these positions kept on a computer somewhere," Langley says. 

Positional information captured by any means would only be useful for as long as the 
caller remained in the same place, he notes: "Anyone wanting to use the information 
would have to work quickly." 

Thuraya telephones can connect to GSM mobile phone networks when they are available, 
and a satellite network when in more remote areas. The phones can also be used as a 
GPS receiver, determining its position by communicating with satellites in the GPS 
constellation. 

If the GPS functionality is switched on, the caller's co-ordinates are automatically 
embedded in the voice signal sent to the communications satellites. 


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