LONDON, UK: A mobile phone application worth less than two pounds
which precisely tracks aircraft in flight has spurred fears that it
could make them terror targets, a security expert was Sunday quoted as
saying.

The Plane Finder AR application for the Apple iPhone and Google's
Android allows users to point their phone at the sky and detect the
position, height and speed of nearby aircraft, the Daily Mail quoted
the expert as saying.

It also shows the airline, flight number, departure point, destination
and even the likely course.

The programme, developed by a British firm and sold for just 1.79
pounds in the online Apple store, was labelled an "aid to terrorists"
by the security expert amid fears it could be used to target an
aircraft with a surface-to-air missile, the Daily Mail said.

The new application works by intercepting the so-called Automatic
Dependent Surveillance - broadcasts (ADS-B) transmitted by most
passenger aircraft to a new satellite tracking system that supplements
or, in some countries, replaces radar.

British and European air traffic control systems have not yet adopted
the technology but it is being fitted in all new aircraft, which now
constantly broadcast their positions.

After the 9/11 attacks in the US in 2001, a senior Federal Aviation
Administration official warned that ADS-B technology could be used by
terrorists.

The firm behind the application, Pinkfroot, uses a network of aircraft
enthusiasts in Britain and abroad who are equipped with ADS-B
receivers costing around 200 pounds to intercept the information from
aircraft and send it to a central database.

But Pinkfroot, based in Southsea, Hampshire, has gone a step further,
marketing a so-called 'Augmented Reality' application because users
can point a phone's camera at the sky and see the precise position of
aircraft superimposed on the horizon.

Lee Armstrong, a director of Pinkfroot, had said that it had "crossed
our minds" that "a terrorist could use it" and admitted that the firm
had tried to reduce the risk.

"It is only real-time to an extent - it is about 30 seconds behind. If
someone really wants to do that [shoot down a jet] they could buy
their own ADS-B or radar," he added.

©IANS

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