b...@iaxs.net said: > These time stamps are required by government regulations in some > industries.
Do you have a list of the industries and/or regulations and/or what they require? I know about the stock market. (That is, I know there are requirements but I don't know the details.) In terms of control systems, what level of accuracy do they need? How much of the problem is legal vs technical? What happens if the GPS/clock breaks? Do they shut down a power plant? > Spoofing the time from a remote location seems impossible. Or is it > just difficult? I don't think it would be hard for a well funded bad guy. The normal signal levels are very weak so it shouldn't be hard to overpower them. I've seen GPS test sets advertised. Why would it be hard to put an antenna on one and overpower the real signals from blocks or miles away? > So, what are the threats to a GPS time receiver? Jamming is possible, > or just overloading the receiver, but the receiver goes into holdover > mode and keeps on ticking with the disciplined oscillator. This does > little damage compared with jamming the transmissions of wireless > sensors. The receiver only goes into holdover if you have an expensive (relatively) box that is intended to provide holdover. Cheap consumer GPS gear doesn't do that. One threat is software bugs, both in the GPS device and in OS time keeping software. I've seen low cost GPS units be off by a second. I've seen it often enough that it's no longer surprising. (I'll try to fish out some log files if you need real data.) I think they usually happen right after recovering from a too-weak signal. Normally they don't last long, but I think I have one sample that lasted long enough to be interesting. I assume you are familiar with ntp. It's got a collection of heuristics for ignoring buggy clocks/systems. If you are trying to avoid software bugs you want diversity in the collection of clocks/systems you are using. Don't forget leap seconds. Time is doubly interesting for overall security since the security aspects of many other network protocols depend upon correct time. Do you want to go down that rathole? -- These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam. _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.