Several companies were hit by hours of system
warnings after GPS satellites broadcast the wrong time, according to
time-monitoring company Chronos.
Such a discrepancy is considered severe and
several Chronos telecoms clients faced "12 hours" of system errors.
Previously, the GPS errors had also been blamed
for disturbances with BBC radio broadcasts.
According to the US Air Force, which manages the
GPS satellite network, problems began when a satellite named SVN 23 was
decommissioned.
'Escalating alarms'
"Our support manager was rung at
[02:00]," said Chronos chief executive Prof Charles Curry.
"He was called from his bed by a network
operations centre."
"What we saw was about 12 hours of
problems," he told the BBC.
Prof Curry said telecoms companies relied on the
accuracy of time measurements to control the flow of data through their
networks.
The bits and bytes of a telephone call, for
example, might be synchronised based on the time as reported by GPS satellite
signals.
That signal was constantly monitored for accuracy.
And when the 13 microsecond error had been
detected, it resulted in thousands of system warnings being activated at some
companies.
"The alarms were escalating," said Prof
Curry.
"One particular network we have, which is a
global network, [was] seeing alarms from all over the place, all over the
world."
Prof Curry said he was not aware of any
consequences of these problems that would have been apparent to the public -
probably thanks to back-up time systems.
And this kind of issue was extremely rare.
"Last week was an example of something going
wrong in a fairly major way," he said.
"I don't think it's gone quite that badly
wrong since 1 January 2004, when the same satellite vehicle number [SVN], 23,
decided to become unhappy."
The Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation
(RNTFnd) - which advocates the development of dependable timing systems - also
had "minor reports" from the telecoms and energy sectors as a result
of the GPS issue.
Dana Goward, the foundation's president, said,
"It [had] a very broad and - very fortunately - minor impact on many
infrastructure sectors."
Details unclear
During the decommissioning of SVN 23, an issue in
the "Global Positioning System ground software" had been detected,
the USAF said.
But full details of what went wrong, and why more
than one satellite became affected, remain unclear.
This week, Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado
published a press release unrelated to the incident, praising the "perfect
signal" provided by GPS and pointing out how useful GPS was for military
operations.
Lt Col Matthew Brandt said: "Somebody
somewhere is using that signal to put a bomb on a target and kill a bad guy.
"Somebody is using GPS to pull an extraction
or using it to call in an air strike."
In its original statement, the Air Force noted,
"the Joint Space Operations Centre at Vandenberg [Air Force Base] has not
received any reports of issues with GPS-aided munitions."
Source: BBC
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