Close Menu
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
What's Hot

First Jupiter HC2 enters UK service ahead of deployment

29/12/2025

Albemarle: The Lithium Rocket May Start Slowing Down (Rating Downgrade)

29/12/2025

AFCON 2025 line-ups, stats, preview, stream

29/12/2025
Facebook Tumblr
Monday, December 29
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
Newstech24.com
Home»NEWS»New Baltic study finds spoofing surge near Kaliningrad
NEWS

New Baltic study finds spoofing surge near Kaliningrad

By Admin29/12/2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
New Baltic study finds spoofing surge near Kaliningrad
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A new technical study has recorded a marked escalation in GNSS interference in the southern Baltic Sea, with shipborne measurements indicating a shift from simple jamming to coordinated spoofing–jamming activity near the maritime boundary of Kaliningrad.

The follow-up research, shared with the UK Defence Journal by GPSPatron, expands on a land-based monitoring project we reported on last year. The previous phase, conducted with Gdynia Maritime University, documented persistent multi-constellation jamming from a fixed sensor ashore. This latest six-month campaign placed a GP-Probe TGE2 system aboard a research vessel operating from the Port of Gdańsk between June and October 2025, capturing interference exactly as it affects ships under way.

The results suggest a material change in the electronic warfare environment. According to the report, the strongest events now blend forged GPS signals with simultaneous jamming of GLONASS, Galileo and BeiDou. The authors argue this imposes reliance on spoofed GPS inputs while denying access to independent satellite ranges. They recorded 83.5 percent GNSS availability in the worst period and more than four days of spoofing across June and July, including nearly 30 continuous hours inside a 48-hour window.

Spectral analysis points to several emitters rather than a single system. Four distinct signatures were identified: a spoofing transmitter, two chirp jammers in different bands and a broadband analog-like jammer covering the full L1 band. The report states the near-simultaneous activation of these components implies a centrally coordinated network, while differing spectral fingerprints suggest multiple sites.

The technical profile has also changed. The earlier study highlighted clean, constellation-matched wideband jamming associated with modern systems. The new dataset shows simpler chirp jamming at higher power, combined with spoofing and older RF hardware with frequency instability. That mix, the authors say, indicates an environment where legacy high-power systems and newer spoofing tools are being used together.

Interference strength rises sharply offshore. Signals that appear weak in Gdańsk become significantly stronger in open water, increasing by up to 15 dB as the vessel approaches waters facing Kaliningrad. That spatial gradient underpins the paper’s conclusion that maritime operators bear the brunt of disruption, with fewer effects detectable on shore-based infrastructure.

Stefan Majinovic of GPSPatron told us the findings offer a “rare, data-driven view” of a rapidly evolving threat picture and that the company is making raw data available for further scrutiny. The full report, including spectrograms and methodology, is available on GPSPatron’s website.


Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Admin
  • Website

Related Posts

First Jupiter HC2 enters UK service ahead of deployment

29/12/2025

First Jackal 3 Extenda vehicles completed in Devonport

29/12/2025

Thales to build AI mine warfare hubs for Royal Navy

29/12/2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
NEWS
2 Mins Read

First Jupiter HC2 enters UK service ahead of deployment

By Admin29/12/20252 Mins Read

The first Jupiter HC2 helicopter has begun flying operations at RAF Benson, marking its entry…

Like this:

Like Loading...

Albemarle: The Lithium Rocket May Start Slowing Down (Rating Downgrade)

29/12/2025

AFCON 2025 line-ups, stats, preview, stream

29/12/2025

The Most Dangerous People on the Internet in 2025

29/12/2025

Invesco Balanced-Risk Commodity Strategy Fund Q3 2025 Commentary (BRCAX)

29/12/2025

Guardian Metal Resources: Smart Investors Wait As The Stock Market Gains Confidence(GMTLF)

29/12/2025

The Earth Is Nearing an Environmental Tipping Point

29/12/2025

Fidelity Growth Strategies Fund Q3 2025 Commentary (FDEGX)

29/12/2025

First Jackal 3 Extenda vehicles completed in Devonport

29/12/2025

You’ve been targeted by government spyware. Now what?

29/12/2025
Advertisement
About Us
About Us

NewsTech24 is your premier digital news destination, delivering breaking updates, in-depth analysis, and real-time coverage across sports, technology, global economics, and the Arab world. We pride ourselves on accuracy, speed, and unbiased reporting, keeping you informed 24/7. Whether it’s the latest tech innovations, market trends, sports highlights, or key developments in the Middle East—NewsTech24 bridges the gap between news and insight.

Company
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms Of Use
Latest Posts

First Jupiter HC2 enters UK service ahead of deployment

29/12/2025

Albemarle: The Lithium Rocket May Start Slowing Down (Rating Downgrade)

29/12/2025

AFCON 2025 line-ups, stats, preview, stream

29/12/2025

The Most Dangerous People on the Internet in 2025

29/12/2025

Invesco Balanced-Risk Commodity Strategy Fund Q3 2025 Commentary (BRCAX)

29/12/2025
Newstech24.com
Facebook X (Twitter) Tumblr Threads RSS
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

%d