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Electronic Warfare

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OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
Electronic Warfare
I just realized how easy Electronic Warfare is in Eclipse phase. Jamming (p.262) is a complex action Interfacing test that requires no special equipment, (apparently just mesh inserts can do the job). The Jamming test is predicated on an Interfacing test to Scan (p.251) the signal you want to jam but that's only if you're trying to do selective Jamming. This seems unrealistically simplistic to me given the structure and topology of mesh network communications. Given frequency modulation, Spread Spectrum modulation, and the problems that the signals you want to jam in Selective Jamming are emitted randomly from any device in communication range; shouldn't Selective jamming require equipment and software for triangulation and scanning at least? Shouldn't Universal jamming (if that's even possible in a mesh) be determined by "biggest equipment wins"? Finally: What portion of the spectrum does the mesh occupy? Is transhumanity still transmitting 800-2100Mhz or are they using a different color?

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
OneTrikPony wrote:
I just realized how easy Electronic Warfare is in Eclipse phase. Jamming (p.262) is a complex action Interfacing test that requires no special equipment, (apparently just mesh inserts can do the job). The Jamming test is predicated on an Interfacing test to Scan (p.251) the signal you want to jam but that's only if you're trying to do selective Jamming. This seems unrealistically simplistic to me given the structure and topology of mesh network communications. Given frequency modulation, Spread Spectrum modulation, and the problems that the signals you want to jam in Selective Jamming are emitted randomly from any device in communication range; shouldn't Selective jamming require equipment and software for triangulation and scanning at least? Shouldn't Universal jamming (if that's even possible in a mesh) be determined by "biggest equipment wins"? Finally: What portion of the spectrum does the mesh occupy? Is transhumanity still transmitting 800-2100Mhz or are they using a different color?
The problem is that jamming is relatively easy in real life as well, but jamming isn't necessarily a useful technique. There are plenty of disadvantages to jamming, and I will list out the ones I know of. [list=1][*][b]Jamming only works on reception[/b]: Unless the jammer is in signal range of the receiving device, nothing is jammed. Now, it should be noted that both devices in two-way communications count as receiving devices, so either can be jammed for that purpose. But if I use a one-way transmission protocol to send you a text while some guy tries to jam me, it'll probably do nothing. This is why trying to jam a radio tower would be futile. It would only screw with any receiving radios in your signal range. [*][b]Jammers jam themselves[/b]: Any device that is actively using it's transmitter to produce jamming signals can do nothing else with it's transmitter. Now this could be mitigated by simply using two devices... one to jam, one to do communications. However, if one is universally jamming every frequency, even having two devices is worthless... you are, after all, at the epicenter of the jamming signals. Chances are if you are universally jamming, you will exclude a single frequency for your own use. However, if someone else scans and finds that frequency, it could be trouble for you. [*][b]Jammers only work against radio[/b]: This is an obvious one, but a weakness that can't be overlooked. In 10 AF, transmission methods include such things as laser or microwave link, neutrino, and other mediums that are simply unaffectable by radio jamming. Key mesh infrastructure in major habitats and planetary cities are probably supported by wired networking as well as wireless, so you probably will do little damage in this regard. If you are trying to cut off a ship's crew from being able to control their ship wirelessly, all it takes to halt your sabotage is for them to form a physical or laser link. [*][b]Jammers can be triangulated[/b]: The whole point of radio jamming is to make an obnoxious transmission that drowns out all others. This turns out to be a double-edged sword. Four devices, used in tandem, can use the latency of your transmission to their locations and triangulate your exact spatial location (three can technically do it, but won't necessarily determine exact altitude). This means that if you piss the right people off during your jamming attempt, they may take the time to track your ass down, and it won't take much time at all.[/list]
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OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Good points. I'm going to play Devil's Advocate in support of my argument that the rules make it too easy. 1. It's true that Jamming doesn't stop anyone from transmitting but If I step on someone else's signal then no one in My range can use that frequency at at that modulation. So, If I want to mug or murder average joe without him or his muse screaming about it over the mesh It will take me 12 seconds to get that done. If I'm using a throwaway ecto, (which I should cause while I'm jamming I just cliped major bandwidth out of Everyone's mesh and they'll B p!553d), then I allready have twice the signal range that average joe has and No One Can Hear Him Scream. 2. Good point but other transmitters are a dyme a dozen. I don't have to use my mesh inserts. See above. 3. Also a good point. except that microwave / laserlink is rarely the only spectrum used for Comms. I reference the [url=http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/attacks/232300666]US Drone Captured by Iran[/url] which obvously had a microwave link to a satalite that didn't help at all. 4. Assuming a single emitter. My position could be obfuscated by using one or several of my drones to sniff and then attack the signals i want to jam. Referring back to point 2. My drones have transducers and AI. They should be able to transmit a jamming signal and still listen to me, as long as I have two devices, one to talk to them and one to jam with. With an eye to developing a house rule to model jamming in greater depth I've been studying up. I think my issue may not be with actually Jamming the signal but sniffing it in the first place. In a world were even simple radio devices use Frequency Hopping, Spread Spectrum, Frequency modulated radio transmission in a meshed network I don't understand how it's possible to nail down the frequencies you want to jam at all.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
OneTrikPony wrote:
Good points. I'm going to play Devil's Advocate in support of my argument that the rules make it too easy.
*Cracks knuckles* Alright, let's do this! :D
OneTrikPony wrote:
1. It's true that Jamming doesn't stop anyone from transmitting but If I step on someone else's signal then no one in My range can use that frequency at at that modulation. So, If I want to mug or murder average joe without him or his muse screaming about it over the mesh It will take me 12 seconds to get that done. If I'm using a throwaway ecto, (which I should cause while I'm jamming I just cliped major bandwidth out of Everyone's mesh and they'll B p!553d), then I allready have twice the signal range that average joe has and No One Can Hear Him Scream. 2. Good point but other transmitters are a dyme a dozen. I don't have to use my mesh inserts. See above.
This only works if your jammer has longer signal range than his, or if some area of his signal range does not cover a receiver outside of your range. Otherwise, there is the very real possibility that your victim will still get an emergency message out. Plus, habitat policing services may monitor the airwaves for jamming signals, as my guess is that they would be illegal. If this is the case, then your jamming signal is itself a big alarm to the cops that something is going down.
OneTrikPony wrote:
3. Also a good point. except that microwave / laserlink is rarely the only spectrum used for Comms. I reference the [url=http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/attacks/232300666]US Drone Captured by Iran[/url] which obvously had a microwave link to a satalite that didn't help at all.
Actually, the inverse may be true in this case. Apparently an Iranian scientist claims that the reason the drone was captured was because of a GPS hack... several weeks ago, our military had announced that a virus was found on their drone network, but they did nothing about it as it seemed harmless. This virus may have been the means by which they were able to capture the drone. So in this case, the weakness may have been security holes in our GPS network and programmed interdependency.
OneTrikPony wrote:
4. Assuming a single emitter. My position could be obfuscated by using one or several of my drones to sniff and then attack the signals i want to jam. Referring back to point 2. My drones have transducers and AI. They should be able to transmit a jamming signal and still listen to me, as long as I have two devices, one to talk to them and one to jam with.
It depends. If they are transmitting universal jamming signals, then they may not be able to communicate with you. If they are transmitting selective signals, it is a possibility, but the jamming signals can be used to triangulate each of your drones, and their connection to you can be used to pinpoint your location. You simply added another step in the process. Plus, this adds quite a bit of equipment into the equation, and makes jamming expensive to utilize effectively. In a way, that balances it's effects.
OneTrikPony wrote:
With an eye to developing a house rule to model jamming in greater depth I've been studying up. I think my issue may not be with actually Jamming the signal but sniffing it in the first place. In a world were even simple radio devices use Frequency Hopping, Spread Spectrum, Frequency modulated radio transmission in a meshed network I don't understand how it's possible to nail down the frequencies you want to jam at all.
In the same way that transmission protocols and hardware have improved, I have no doubt that jamming methodology and tactics have improved as well. A transmission that cannot be jammed is also a transmission that cannot be intercepted... so remember that before you work out a means to balance out the mechanics.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Decivre wrote:
*Cracks knuckles* Alright, let's do this! :D
LOL Awesome :D
Quote:
This only works if your jammer has longer signal range than his, or if some area of his signal range does not cover a receiver outside of your range. Otherwise, there is the very real possibility that your victim will still get an emergency message out.
Of course this is correct in a simple system like ship to ship short range radio (do they even use that anymore? I suppose so re. the miniature farcaster and radio boosterhardware) But, I'm not so sure this would be the case in a mesh network of cellular band comms. (Mesh inserts have very high data bandwidth and a range of about 1KM so I think were talking about the same cellular radio bands we use today) I think it might depend on how dense is your mesh cloud . In a situation where nodes are sparse and distant the jamming of one node is apparent and damaging to the whole network. In a situation of moderate density or urban density it's not going to be apparent at the outside of the device range that one node is being intentionally jammed because the farther the signal of one node traveles the more it gets unintentionally stepped on by other legitimate nodes with stronger signals. (I'm talking "inverse Squares law" here.) So it doesn't matter so much if you distort the signal for *every* ear within range as long as you cover the closest ones. Your Transmission footprint doesn't have to match *exactly* Of course authorities are going to come down hard on anyone who gets rude with mesh bandwidth. Universal or Barrage jamming is the electronic equivalent of blowing an airhorn in church. There's hardly any reason to ever do that. But, the mesh is self generating and self healing so cutting out a small protion of the bandwidth is not always obvious. I also think that Universal jamming doesn't require an Interfacing test to Scann. You don't care what signal your killing you just set it to transmit on all frequencies of one or several bands. That's one reason why I think signal jammer should use, if not require, special hardware. If you use a mesh registered device like your ecto or inserts then it's obvious that the device at "this IP" is generating an attack on "this channel". If you use a transmitter that isn't part of the mesh then it's activity can't be tracked, just triangulated. I think it's highly unlikely that the [url=http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/10/virus-hits-drone-fleet/]Keylogger virus at Creech[/url] is related to the iranian GPS spoof. I've provided the original wired article. There was another I read quoting the "airforce personnel" thinking that the keylogger may be the airforce spying on their own personnel. I'll try to find it later.
Quote:
A transmission that cannot be jammed is also a transmission that cannot be intercepted...
Thanks for this! :D This might make jamming a frequency hopping, spread spectrum transmission much easier. My original premise is that that is a very difficult thing to do. Maybe not, if you can listen to the transmission at the same time as you jam it then it's not hard to follow it around the spectrum while you grief it. I need to figure out if that's possible.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
OneTrikPony wrote:
Of course this is correct in a simple system like ship to ship short range radio (do they even use that anymore? I suppose so re. the miniature farcaster and radio boosterhardware) But, I'm not so sure this would be the case in a mesh network of cellular band comms. (Mesh inserts have very high data bandwidth and a range of about 1KM so I think were talking about the same cellular radio bands we use today) I think it might depend on how dense is your mesh cloud . In a situation where nodes are sparse and distant the jamming of one node is apparent and damaging to the whole network. In a situation of moderate density or urban density it's not going to be apparent at the outside of the device range that one node is being intentionally jammed because the farther the signal of one node traveles the more it gets unintentionally stepped on by other legitimate nodes with stronger signals. (I'm talking "inverse Squares law" here.) So it doesn't matter so much if you distort the signal for *every* ear within range as long as you cover the closest ones. Your Transmission footprint doesn't have to match *exactly* Of course authorities are going to come down hard on anyone who gets rude with mesh bandwidth. Universal or Barrage jamming is the electronic equivalent of blowing an airhorn in church. There's hardly any reason to ever do that. But, the mesh is self generating and self healing so cutting out a small protion of the bandwidth is not always obvious. I also think that Universal jamming doesn't require an Interfacing test to Scann. You don't care what signal your killing you just set it to transmit on all frequencies of one or several bands. That's one reason why I think signal jammer should use, if not require, special hardware. If you use a mesh registered device like your ecto or inserts then it's obvious that the device at "this IP" is generating an attack on "this channel". If you use a transmitter that isn't part of the mesh then it's activity can't be tracked, just triangulated. I think it's highly unlikely that the [url=http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/10/virus-hits-drone-fleet/]Keylogger virus at Creech[/url] is related to the iranian GPS spoof. I've provided the original wired article. There was another I read quoting the "airforce personnel" thinking that the keylogger may be the airforce spying on their own personnel. I'll try to find it later.
Signal range probably isn't completely relevant within an urban environment, where the only thing you have to worry about is the range of inserts or ectos, but it could be crucial to doing that same robbery out in the fringes... if the guy has an emergency radio system in his camp, it wouldn't be hard for him to get a pretty powerful signal out there. And with a mesh topology, that signal only has to hit a single node to potentially make it to the authorities. In an urban environment, your bigger risk is likely to be the public feeds and camera systems that act as big brother for the area; jamming the signals is worthless if someone has a wired feed to the camera filming your very robbery. Signal jammers don't use special hardware. If you can transmit, you can jam. That's not to say that specialized hardware couldn't be better at it, but it's not something that is exclusive to said hardware. However, most stock operating systems would probably not have options for jamming, so you would likely need a custom one on your system to allow it, or software that accommodates it. If there was any complaint that I have about the current rules, it's that it seems that anyone with mesh inserts can create a jamming signal. Most people don't even know how one is produced, let alone how to make a computer do it today. I would say that modifying an ecto or mesh inserts for jamming capability when they don't already have it would take a relatively quick programming test (interval time of perhaps an hour), or a hardware test for other radio systems. Once done, this makes that system capable of jamming at any point in the future. This may not be necessary for some open-source operating systems, so it may not be necessary for a PCs own mesh inserts if they are assumed to already have some non-commercial operating system from the outer fringes. That said, a jammer is likely not to be traced by something that's the equivalent of an IP address. If something is modified to produce a jamming signal, it's going to send out random noise on that frequency, and will likely not generate any protocol information in the signal. If you think about a transmission as akin to a phone call, signal interception would be the equivalent of picking up another headset and putting your hand over the mouthpiece to listen in on the conversation; jamming is the equivalent of screaming into the mouthpiece and making fart noises until either party gives up on trying to have a conversation. And if the keylogger is an example of the Air Force spying on itself, than it's one of the worst software logistics flubs since ever. Those keyloggers should have never have been detected, because the people monitoring the systems for malware should have been in the know. The military has really got to get its act together. Oh, and universal jamming doesn't require a test to scan. You only must scan to pinpoint a signal for selective jamming. Jamming does, however, still require an Interface test to utilize (this means that selective jamming requires two Interface tests... one to scan, one to jam). Also, did you notice that someone who's signal has been jammed can do an opposed interface test to beat the jam?
OneTrikPony wrote:
Thanks for this! :D This might make jamming a frequency hopping, spread spectrum transmission much easier. My original premise is that that is a very difficult thing to do. Maybe not, if you can listen to the transmission at the same time as you jam it then it's not hard to follow it around the spectrum while you grief it. I need to figure out if that's possible.
The scanning test likely includes calculating any transmission's frequency hopping and spectrum spread in it, all done before the jamming process starts. Since frequency hopping and spread-spectrum transmission are both likely to be standard for mesh-capable devices in 10 AF, then any hacker that is looking to do it would probably take both into account. Plus, frequency hopping tends to be easier to jam than intercept... listening to multiple frequencies is much harder than producing noise that fills multiple frequencies.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
I have been thinking a bit about the supposed unjammability of neutrino transmissions. I think the proper answer is that it is rarely worth the heavy effort to jam neutrinos, but it can be done. A neutrino receiver is using future tech to somehow intercept neutrinos and turn them into a signal. This implies that there is a way to somehow up the cross section of matter-neutrino interactions *a lot* (this is not crazy or soft sf, just some odd effect presently unknown in the standard model of physics). If this is good enough then whatever this tech is can be used to shield, and recipients behind the shield will not get much signal. However, the tech might merely be mildly opaque rather than strongly opaque. If there is an upper limit to intercepting 1% of the signal strength with one device, then you will have a hard time building a full shield. A far easier approach is to make a lot of neutrinos and send them at the receiver. We know farcasters and especially emergency farcasters can do this. It is not implausible that other neutrino sources such as fission or fusion reactors can add noise to signals, especially if they are close by - or redesigned to mess up the receiver. In addition, the tech might provide nice ways of making neutrinos more easily (the emergency farcaster seems to imply this), allowing nearby neutrino noisemakers to overshadow remote signals. However, they are likely easy to pinpoint direction-wise. For true comms security, only QE works. Assuming post-singularity nasties doesn't know how to hack quantum mechanics...
Extropian
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Arenamontanus wrote:
I have been thinking a bit about the supposed unjammability of neutrino transmissions. I think the proper answer is that it is rarely worth the heavy effort to jam neutrinos, but it can be done. A neutrino receiver is using future tech to somehow intercept neutrinos and turn them into a signal. This implies that there is a way to somehow up the cross section of matter-neutrino interactions *a lot* (this is not crazy or soft sf, just some odd effect presently unknown in the standard model of physics). If this is good enough then whatever this tech is can be used to shield, and recipients behind the shield will not get much signal. However, the tech might merely be mildly opaque rather than strongly opaque. If there is an upper limit to intercepting 1% of the signal strength with one device, then you will have a hard time building a full shield. A far easier approach is to make a lot of neutrinos and send them at the receiver. We know farcasters and especially emergency farcasters can do this. It is not implausible that other neutrino sources such as fission or fusion reactors can add noise to signals, especially if they are close by - or redesigned to mess up the receiver. In addition, the tech might provide nice ways of making neutrinos more easily (the emergency farcaster seems to imply this), allowing nearby neutrino noisemakers to overshadow remote signals. However, they are likely easy to pinpoint direction-wise. For true comms security, only QE works. Assuming post-singularity nasties doesn't know how to hack quantum mechanics...
One thing one of my groups theorized is that the inability to jam neutrino emissions has something to do with the fact that neutrinos are particles rather than waves. Radio jamming is about muffling other radio waves with your own, but a neutrino receiver can receive every single neutrino that comes its way, and discern its source from the angle of reception. This ability would make it possible to determine whether each and every neutrino is from a different transmission source, and filter out which one is the proper transmission to decode. In effect, a neutrino receiver collects ALL neutrino transmissions that comes its way, then separates them based on the angle of the source (with mild corrections in case of moving transmitters). It then runs through the data one at a time until it determines which one was intended for that receiver, and begins the process of decryption. This would theoretically make it unjammable (unless the jamming transmitter is at the exactly identical source angle from the receiver as the actual transmitter is... which would be ludicrously difficult to pull off).
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Decivre wrote:
One thing one of my groups theorized is that the inability to jam neutrino emissions has something to do with the fact that neutrinos are particles rather than waves.
Yes, but... neutrinos are waves too. Just like radio photons. And chairs.
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Radio jamming is about muffling other radio waves with your own, but a neutrino receiver can receive every single neutrino that comes its way, and discern its source from the angle of reception. This ability would make it possible to determine whether each and every neutrino is from a different transmission source, and filter out which one is the proper transmission to decode.
You can do exactly the same with radio. You just need a very directional radio that ignores all the waves/photons from the wrong direction - a point to point beam. It is much easier to do at shorter wavelengths, hence point to point laser communication.
Extropian
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Arenamontanus wrote:
You can do exactly the same with radio. You just need a very directional radio that ignores all the waves/photons from the wrong direction - a point to point beam. It is much easier to do at shorter wavelengths, hence point to point laser communication.
Apparently this isn't the case with neutrino transmitters... they do have the ability to directionalize, and very easily, probably due to their size. Neutrinos are as un-jammable as laser communications due to their directionalization, but with the added ability to pass through matter (making them even harder to jam, since you can't block the signal). The only real weakness to neutrino communications is that there's no way for the transmitter to directionalize... all transmissions must be encrypted, because anyone with a receiver in [i]any direction[/i] can intercept them (even accidentally). Though I still say that jamming is possible if a jamming transceiver sits precisely between the transmitter and receiver, thus allowing it to pose as the transmitter and screw with the transmission. But it would be hard as crap.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
psiili psiili's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Quote:
The only real weakness to neutrino communications is that there's no way for the transmitter to directionalize...
Incorrect, you can aim and directionalize a neurino beam (depending, of course on how you produce it!), see CERN LHC neutrino beam experiment that produced hard-to-believe superluminal velocity values for the netrinoes. For a more layman-readable explanation: http://profmattstrassler.com/2011/09/23/how-to-make-a-neutrino-beam/ And of course, ALL signals should be encrypted. Just to be safe from eavesdroppers, curious AIs, and hungry, hungry TITANs. ;)
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
psiili wrote:
Quote:
The only real weakness to neutrino communications is that there's no way for the transmitter to directionalize...
Incorrect, you can aim and directionalize a neurino beam (depending, of course on how you produce it!), see CERN LHC neutrino beam experiment that produced hard-to-believe superluminal velocity values for the netrinoes. For a more layman-readable explanation: http://profmattstrassler.com/2011/09/23/how-to-make-a-neutrino-beam/ And of course, ALL signals should be encrypted. Just to be safe from eavesdroppers, curious AIs, and hungry, hungry TITANs. ;)
Hmm. That certainly puts a damper on that theory, and starts to make it curious that there are such fears about neutrino interception within the setting of Eclipse Phase.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
King Shere King Shere's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Well another approach would be to ensure that what ever is transmitted isn't reaching its intended target. Deflection, absorbtion & blockage could be considered if jamming doesn't. Wrap the transmitter with Faraday cage containment metamaterials, with suitable bending properties. I suspect a mini black hole could sabotage/ block & deflect much -including neutrinos. If not -how about a genuine black hole. Though the TITAN overlords might want the starsystem intact. Some scientific links to give ideas. "metamaterials ensnares microwave light" http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/38953 "invisibility cloak for magnetism" http://www.physorg.com/news126183882.html "magnetism disappears at nanoscale" http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/38953
psiili psiili's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Quote:
Hmm. That certainly puts a damper on that theory, and starts to make it curious that there are such fears about neutrino interception within the setting of Eclipse Phase.
Actually, just because you can aim and directionalize a beam doesn't mean someone else can't eavesdrop. For example, the CERN neutrino beam spreads to 2km diameter at 730km distance, so if you can be in the correct direction or just close enough with a receiver sensitive enough... I wonder, how many unofficial neutrino receivers set to listen there are on mars? Which gives me a creepy idea. Lets say a some exhumans go out into the kuiper belt / oort cloud and grab a generic icecube, say 100km wide and make it into a humongous neutrino receiver. Then, slowly put it into a suitably elliptic orbit somewhere far out. An orbit, which, from time to time comes in line with planet-to-planet transmissions so you can receive faint neutrino signals from data and egoes travelling between planets. Repeat a few hundred times. Icecubes are cheap. Use received egoes for nefarious purposes. Even better to use a run-out comet core somewhere in the inner system. Easier to get in line and and you can get by with less sensitive neutrino receivers. (Inverse square law and all that.) Of course, in any case you might get only a days to weeks worth of receptions per year, but depending on how high quality encryption gets used and how good your decryption is, you might strike rich. While quantum entanglement -based encryption is the gold standard, unbreakable to non-TITANs, is your transceiver properly entangled with the other end? Or did your subcontractor decide to cut his costs...
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
psiili wrote:
While quantum entanglement -based encryption is the gold standard, unbreakable to non-TITANs, is your transceiver properly entangled with the other end? Or did your subcontractor decide to cut his costs...
Theoretically, entangled OTP encryption is unbreakable by any means. You have a truly random cipher only visible to parties on either end of the transmission, and all decryption relies on pattern recognition (random ciphers don't have patterns). Unless the TITANs have access to something well beyond our understanding that gives them access to the cipher (perhaps they can see into other dimensions beside our three spatial ones, like a dimension through which all entangled information passes giving them a chance to see the cipher as well; or maybe they can even use some unknown quantum property to perceive the past, allowing them to observe the actual transmission itself; or as a real wild twist, perhaps reality is in fact nonrandom in all ways, and the TITANs can calculate the cipher by predicting it based on known information), it should be inaccessible even to them.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Decivre wrote:
Though I still say that jamming is possible if a jamming transceiver sits precisely between the transmitter and receiver, thus allowing it to pose as the transmitter and screw with the transmission. But it would be hard as crap.
Not really. It would be very simple to rig up a drone with a transceiver configured to transmit white or pink noise (or the equivalent) on the frequences you want to DoS. The receiver stage of the transceiver could be wired into the drone's on-board controller to provide input to commands which are the equivalent of "Position yourself in the center of the strongest transmission within the following lrange of frequencies and drive the transceiver's output stage at maximum output using the jammer module as its data input. Listen periodically to ensure that you remain within the region of greatest signal strength and reposition yourself appropriately to remain there." You would not even need a gamma fork of someone for that, it could be done with a limited AI, or even the Eclipse Phase equivalent of a simple Python script to implement it.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
King Shere wrote:
Well another approach would be to ensure that what ever is transmitted isn't reaching its intended target. Deflection, absorbtion & blockage could be considered if jamming doesn't.
If it interferes with signal propagation, signal discernment, or signal transmission, it would be considered jamming. Incidentally, there appears to be precedent for what you suggest. There are stories dating back to the first Gulf War in which power to certain towns was knocked out by low-flying air support dropping lengths of graphite fibre and chickenwire over high-tension lines.
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
psiili wrote:
I wonder, how many unofficial neutrino receivers set to listen there are on mars?
The chapter on Mars in [u]Sunward[/u] implies that the number is 'many', seeing as how the narrator talks about listening to Radio Argosy on an improvised neutrino receiver along with a number of other broadcasts (page 97, PDF page 99).
psiili wrote:
While quantum entanglement -based encryption is the gold standard, unbreakable to non-TITANs, is your transceiver properly entangled with the other end? Or did your subcontractor decide to cut his costs...
One would think that if the other end was not properly entangled, there would be no reliable communication channel between the two. As for contractors cutting costs, examine the hardwired links leading from the receiver to the rest of the facility's communications network...
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
The Doctor wrote:
Not really. It would be very simple to rig up a drone with a transceiver configured to transmit white or pink noise (or the equivalent) on the frequences you want to DoS. The receiver stage of the transceiver could be wired into the drone's on-board controller to provide input to commands which are the equivalent of "Position yourself in the center of the strongest transmission within the following lrange of frequencies and drive the transceiver's output stage at maximum output using the jammer module as its data input. Listen periodically to ensure that you remain within the region of greatest signal strength and reposition yourself appropriately to remain there." You would not even need a gamma fork of someone for that, it could be done with a limited AI, or even the Eclipse Phase equivalent of a simple Python script to implement it.
Neutrino transmissions likely don't have anything akin to frequencies, so to speak. Rather, filtering out individual communications is probably based on direction rather than modulation. This means that unless your jamming signal is coming from the same direction (and I mean precisely-same direction), the receiver will likely know that the two transmissions are different.
The Doctor wrote:
One would think that if the other end was not properly entangled, there would be no reliable communication channel between the two. As for contractors cutting costs, examine the hardwired links leading from the receiver to the rest of the facility's communications network...
Farcaster networks would have to implement basic handshake protocols that ensure the fidelity of data. Because of latency, however, these protocols will be designed for the risk of data loss, which means the implementation of checksums and message redundancy. An egocast is likely far bigger than the ego contained within, so that the data reception is ensured. For instance, this might mean a checksum hash header followed by the redundantly-expanded file, sent three or more times. The receiver would check the ego against the hash to ensure that enough of the file was received to make the original file, shave out the redundancy, then send back multiple copies of a transmission completion message with the hash of the file received to make sure that the transceiver knows the egocast completed. The source location would retain a backup of the ego until that completion message returns, to ensure that the client is not lost to the aether.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
The Doctor The Doctor's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
Decivre wrote:
Neutrino transmissions likely don't have anything akin to frequencies, so to speak. Rather, filtering out individual communications is probably based on direction rather than modulation. This means that unless your jamming signal is coming from the same direction (and I mean precisely-same direction), the receiver will likely know that the two transmissions are different.
Correct. Hence, programming a drone to figure out where the center of the neutrino beam in question is, positioning itself there, and broadcasting neutrinos along the same path to obscure the signal. The same principle applies with neutrino emissions as it would RF.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Electronic Warfare
The Doctor wrote:
Correct. Hence, programming a drone to figure out where the center of the neutrino beam in question is, positioning itself there, and broadcasting neutrinos along the same path to obscure the signal. The same principle applies with neutrino emissions as it would RF.
That's still going to be pretty damn hard to pull off. You have a lot of obstacles in your way when trying to jam a neutrino transmission. For one, there's the fact that you have to detect the transmission in order to calculate the proper positioning of the jammer. From there, there's the fact that you have to get in place and send a jamming signal before the transmission ends... and considering bandwidth by this time period, that might be a window measured in seconds (even for egocasts). The only way you're going to likely jam a neutrino transmission is if you were already in place to begin with... if you had specific knowledge of both the transmitter and receiver in question prior to the transmission occurring. With the odds of that happening being so slim, it's probably safe to say that neutrino transmissions are three-shakes from perfect in reliability (just behind QE transmissions, which would probably be considered truly perfect).
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]